Lightening Up With HP’s EcoFFICIENT™ Paper: A Shoplet Review Post

Posted on: January 23rd, 2015 by Julie Bestry | 3 Comments

Periodically Paper Doll reviews new and established office supplies and accessories through the Shoplet Product Review Program.

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In the past, I’ve reviewed pens, decorative tape, clipboards and desktop organizers, in posts as varied as Paper Doll Puts Pen To PaperIf It Quacks Like a Duck, Then It Might Be a Zebra, and Organize With Clipboards & Desktop Caddies. However, today is the first time that Paper Doll has been called upon to review actual paper!

THE BASICS

I received two identical trial packs of HP’s new EcoFFICIENT™ Paper from the HP Everyday Papers line, with 50 sheets in each package. The Paper Doll Product Evaluation Team for this review was comprised of myself and a discerning client, using one incredibly stripped-down, basic printer (my own) and her fancy-schmancy printer/copier/scanner/fax/cappuccino maker/hair dryer. (OK, maybe client’s machine just seems exotic by comparison with mine.)

HPEcoFFICIENTPaper

Like typical copy paper, the HP EcoFFICIENT™ paper is 8 1/2″ x 11″ and white. The stats are as follows:

Weight: 16 pound paper (Reviewing my client’s stockpile and my own, it appears we both usually use 20 pound paper.)

Brightness: 92 (My most recently used paper was 88; my client was using 92.)

Whiteness: 155 (My usual was only 125; my client’s stack didn’t reference whiteness.)

And, as you’d expect, the EcoFFICIENT™ is Certified by the Forest Stewardship Council.

EcoFFICIENTonPrinter

THE CLAIMS

HP’s packaging blurb touts that the EcoFFICIENT™ paper prints more efficiently. The basis for these claims? It fits up to 125 more sheets in a printer tray for less refilling, takes up less space to store, and weighs less, so it’s easier to carry. Taking these issues one at a time:

Less refilling! Tastes Great! (Oh, wait, that’s not what they meant.): Well, yeah. You’ll be refilling a stack of (say) 200 sheets 20% more often with the unbearably chubby paper you’ve been using all along than with this svelte version.

Less storage space needed: Yup. The paper is flatter, so you can store more in the same space (or, if space is at a premium, store the same amount in a more compact space).

Weighs less: To me, this is the major advantage. Paper Doll may be a verbal and organizational powerhouse, but I have weak, wimpy wrists. A ream of paper, let alone two, can be heavy. Even if I weren’t too frugal to buy a whole case of paper at once, I still wouldn’t be able to carry it to my car and schlep it up a flight of stairs. A ream at a time, as it is, is hefty enough. EcoFFICIENT™ is definitely lighter.

HP reports the EcoFFICIENT™ runs 625 sheets per ream (instead of the typical 500). Using a digital food-grade scale, which I am sure is not at all scientifically accurate for my Ms. Wizard-ing, I found that HP wasn’t fibbing that this paper is 20% lighter weight compared to standard copy paper.

So far so good.

THE FINDINGS

The first thing I noticed, before opening the packages, was that the label said there were 50 sheets to each trial pack. I was dubious — it looked more like 25. I’ve been loading printers and copy machines since dinosaurs roamed the Earth, so I know what 50 sheets of paper looks (and feels) like. And this wasn’t it. Was this going to be like that old AirMail onion-skin paper on which my third grade pen-pal sent me letters about her fascinating life in Europe, circa 1975?

HP’s packaging promised the paper would provide “consistent quality and high reliability at a greater value with ultra white shade for brighter, sharper, text and colors. So, we put that to the test.

We stacked the printer tray and printed off all the ridiculous pages of a recent Comcast/Xfinity online bill. Our findings?

  • The paper is sufficiently bright and white (though, to borrow from the cosmetics language women’s magazines use to describe foundation and blush, we found it to have a more bluish undertone, vs. traditional paper’s more yellow undertone).
  • The paper is thin, but not appreciably more easily torn.
  • The ink didn’t smudge or bleed.
  • The text is as sharp as we’d expect to see on traditional weight paper, though (as with the paper’s brightness/whiteness) my photographic skills may leave that in doubt.

EcoEFFTight

Note: the above-pictured, extremely wordy “Important Notices” page was printed double-sided, and unless you hold the paper directly up to a light bulb, it’s fairly easy to read without the reverse-side text image bleeding through.

However, the same can’t be said about our next experiment, when we printed the double-sided version of the last few pages of the bill, with a full-color SEC/ESPN logo ad on the reverse of a fairly blank page.

  • We saw serious image bleed-through with color printing and double-sided pages.

EcoEFFBleed

I should note, HP’s packaging for the EcoFFICIENT™ paper deems it “suitable for printing everyday internal documents, drafts and copies.” So, you’d still want to go for the high-end stuff for presentation papers, and Paper Doll suggests not printing double-sided color pages, which, depending on your printing needs, may reduce the sought-after efficiency.

THE TECH LINGO

HP says that the EcoFFICIENT™ Paper is designed for use with HP EcoSMART thin and lightweight paper-compatible multifunction printers and copiers. The packaging states:

For optimum efficiency with your HP EcoSMART printer, select EcoSMART Lite or EcoFFICIENT, when choosing print mode. For all other printers and copiers, choose thin or lightweight paper printer setting. Refer to your owner’s manual for paper compatibility and appropriate printer settings.

When did printers get so complicated?

Also, is it just me, or doesn’t it seem like they lightened the weight of the whole package by getting rid of an E in the word “efficient” to make it EcoFFICIENT™? Who knew an E could be so heavy?

HP EcoFFICIENT™ Paper is available directly from Shoplet, which also maintains a (literally and figuratively) colorful blog about cool office supplies. Shoplet also carries business promotional products and medical supplies. In addition to selling office supplies in North America, Shoplet is a purveyor of office stationery in the UK.

Disclosure: I received these products for review purposes only, and was given no monetary compensation. The opinions, as always, are my own. (Who else would claim them?) 

3 Responses

  1. Thanks for the detailed review! This sounds like a product I could use. I rarely print anything anymore, and when I do it’s usually for “internal” use, so I don’t need to worry about it being presentation-quality. Plus my printer doesn’t do double-sided (horrifying, but true) or color, so bleed through wouldn’t be an issue. I’ll keep an eye open for it!

  2. Nattapong Teerapat says:

    I want to buy A4 Size HP Copy Paper. Please contact me

    Kindly send best price quotation with specification CIF Bangkok-Thailand.

    urgent

    • Julie Bestry says:

      [I have sent you a direct email reply, but in case you are watching this space, I have included my response here.]

      Thank you for writing, but I believe there’s some confusion. I am not a
      store and do not sell paper products. The page of my site that you were on
      and at which you left the comment was a review I wrote about HP’s
      EcoFFICIENT™ Paper on my blog in 2015. It was merely a write-up of my
      opinion.

      I am a professional organizer in Chattanooga, Tennessee in the United
      States, and do not provide services outside this area, and do not sell any
      kind of tangible products. You appear to be in Thailand, and I’m afraid I
      do not know of any of the office supply stores in your country. Perhaps
      Amazon may be of help. I tried Googling for office supply stores in
      Thailand (the way we would locate stores like Staples and Office Depot),
      but was not able to discern someplace useful for you.

      I should note that A4 is not a paper size used in the United States, so
      you will get better results contacting UK, European, or Asian companies
      that specialize in office supplies.

      Sincerely,

      Julie Bestry

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