By Julia Lawrence, Regional Head of Sales – Paper Manufacturing at James Cropper

There’s a scene in film noir classic ‘The Third Man’ where Orson Welles’ character Harry Lime delivers an often-quoted speech.

Switzerland, he sneers, had 500 years of peace and democracy, and what did it produce? The cuckoo clock. Italy, by contrast, had the Borgias, warfare and terror – and produced Michaelangelo, Da Vinci, and the renaissance.

A cynical view, of course, but strip away the nihilism and hyperbole, and there’s a point worth examining. Places shape what gets made, and why. The conditions of a location - its geography, its infrastructure, and its rhythms - become woven into the work itself.

At James Cropper, it’s something we think about often. Our mill sits in Burneside, in the heart of Britain’s Lake District, and has done since 1845. This isn’t heritage branding, it’s a fact that influences everything from the water we use, to the collaborations we enable, and the way that paper gets made. British manufacturing, in our case, is not a selling point to be applied retrospectively, it’s a condition that shapes our creative process from the very beginning.

So, the question is, does packaging carry its location around with it? In a metaphorical sense, does that place become embedded into its spirit?

The geography of making
Start with the physical. Burneside Mill draws water from the River Kent. That water, its chemistry and its quality, affects how fibres behave in suspension, how dyes bond, how paper forms. It's a variable we've learned to take advantage of over six generations. Geography becomes an ingredient.

But proximity matters beyond chemistry. When a brand owner visits our colour lab - the old schoolhouse overlooking the mill - they're watching their custom shade being developed in real time. They’re seeing the vat and touching paper as it comes off the line. Then, they’re subtly adjusting luminance or saturation based on what they observe in their hands, in a way that no PDF attachment could ever quite convey.

That kind of collaboration requires physical closeness. Video calls can’t capture how ink sits on a substrate, and courier samples lose the context of production. When customer and maker share the same room - when clients from London, Paris, Milan, can be here in a morning - adjustments that would take weeks happen in hours.

British manufacturing enables speed of creative dialogue. Location becomes a creative tool.

Tempo and customisation
There's a clear rhythm to how things get made, and it varies by location. Mass production tends to favour standardisation and when you're running million-metre batches, customisation becomes expensive. The machinery doesn't want to stop.

British speciality manufacturing operates differently. At James Cropper, we produce over 1,000 unique papers annually. Custom colours, bespoke weights and papers that exist for a single brand, a single campaign, or a single moment.

That requires infrastructure that can pivot and stay agile. Teams that know the machinery intimately enough to adjust it quickly. A business model that values bespoke work over volume. These are conditions shaped by economic geography, by industrial history, by the kind of manufacturing culture that persists in Britain.

The Lake District itself reinforces this. A UNESCO World Heritage Site doesn't accommodate endless expansion. Growth here means depth, not sprawl. We've spent 50 years developing our Coloursource™ palette, a portfolio of signature shades and each one the product of iterative improvement, responding to how light, fashion, and client needs evolve.

That's a tempo that could only be shaped by location, and responsive in ways that pure scale alone can't match.

Material memory
Materials inherently carry information. Paper fibres especially hold a kind of memory - how they were processed, what water touched them, the tension applied during formation.

When we make paper at Burneside, those fibres absorb dye, water, and context. The attention of the team developing a custom shade, and the 2,000+ live colour recipes in our system, refined over decades. The sensibility that comes from operating in a landscape where craft matters, where making things by close observation remains economically viable.

The question is, does that travel? When a luxury brand chooses British-made packaging or paper products, they're buying the conditions that produced it. That includes the collaborative intensity and the technical precision - 184 blacks, 62 whites, colour-matching to delta-E tolerances that most suppliers won't attempt. The difference is that with James Cropper, someone stood at a vat in Cumbria and watched that exact batch being made.

In a globalised supply chain, where certain packaging elements can be functionally interchangeable, location of production becomes a form of differentiation through the material qualities that place enables.

British-made, especially in the case of James Cropper, is a creative asset. It allows rapid prototyping with client present, bespoke colour development at accessible distances, sustainability commitments shaped by UK regulatory and cultural expectations.

So yes - packaging carries its location as an embedded quality, rather than a label.

When a customer opens a box made from James Cropper paper, they're encountering Burneside whether they know it or not. The precision of that colour match, tuned under Lake District light, is a product of geography. The tactility of that substrate, formed in water drawn from the River Kent and handled by a team with generational knowledge.

Where things get made changes what gets made.
It’s fair to say that since globalisation of supply chains, Britain's manufacturing landscape isn't what it was.

But what remains - mills like ours, speciality producers who've chosen depth over scale - offers something genuinely different. Being here, in this place, with this history, this water, this web of relationships, enables work that simply couldn't happen anywhere else in the world.

At James Cropper, British-made is the condition under which the work becomes possible. The Lake District isn't our backdrop, it's our collaborator. And when that paper leaves Burneside, bound for London, Paris, New York, Tokyo, or beyond, it carries that collaboration with it, embedded in every fibre.