Coin Envelopes
Small kraft envelopes for coins, seeds, keys and parts, printed from small runs up.
Seeds, spare buttons, keys, picks, coins: anything small and losable ends up in a coin envelope. Opaque kraft, a gummed flap, and it costs pennies.
We stock the numbered trade sizes from #1 to #7 and print them with a logo, instructions or a numbering system from small runs up.
- Trade sizes #1 (2.25×3.5) through #7 (3.5×6.5 in)
- 24 or 28 lb kraft, opaque and tear-resistant
- Gummed flap seals shut, no tape or sticker needed
- 1-2 color print: logos, planting instructions, part numbers
“Our cakes travel 40 minutes across town and arrive looking like they left the counter. The window boxes sell them before anyone opens the lid.”
“The bracelet boxes with the foil logo changed how our pieces photograph. Customers post the box as much as the jewelry.”
A hundred jobs, one small envelope
The coin envelope is the utility knife of stationery: seed packets, spare buttons on a garment order, keys at a car dealership, guitar picks, jewelry, sample swatches, collector coins. Anything small, loose and losable ends up in one. The kraft paper is opaque, the gummed flap seals it shut, and the whole thing costs pennies.
The numbered sizes, decoded
Coin envelopes still use the old trade numbers. A #1 is 2.25×3.5 inches, right for a few coins or a button card. #3 (2.5×4.25) is the seed-packet classic. #5.5 (3.125×5.5) takes keys and small parts, and #7 (3.5×6.5) handles bulkier items. Stock is 24 or 28 lb kraft, and collectors can ask for acid-free stock that won't react with metal over the years.
FAQ
Can you print them?
Yes, a 1 or 2 color logo, planting instructions, a numbering system for parts bins, whatever the job needs. Low minimums, since a small shop rarely wants ten thousand.
Which size for seeds?
#3 is the standard seed packet. Go #5.5 if you're adding an instruction card. For envelope sizing beyond coin numbers, see our letter envelope size guide, and for labeling the front, paper tags. Get a quote.





