When you want a printed piece, the first step is not the design — it is choosing the right format. A flyer, folded brochure and booklet look similar but do different jobs and cost differently. The wrong choice means either too little room for your message or money spent on a format that is too complex. Many people ask for a booklet up front when a flyer would do the job better. Here is how to tell them apart and when to use each.
The flyer: one message, fast
A flyer is a single sheet with no fold, printed on one or two sides. It is ideal for a short, urgent message — a discount, an event, a store opening. It costs little, hands out easily on the street or in a mailbox and works when you have one clear idea to deliver. Its design lives on a strong headline, an eye-catching image and a visible call to action. If you try to say too much on a flyer, you lose the very thing that makes it work.
The brochure: more sections through folds
A folded brochure is a sheet folded into two, three or more panels. Each panel becomes a small section, which helps you tell a story in logical steps, from the outer cover inward. The design must be planned around the order in which it unfolds. Common fold types:
- Half fold — four panels, simple and clean.
- Tri fold — six panels, perfect for services.
- Accordion fold — for a step-by-step visual journey.
The booklet: when you have a lot to say
A booklet has several pages stapled or bound and is close to a mini magazine. It is the right choice for a services catalog, a company presentation or a portfolio, where you need room for text, images and a consistent grid across every page. It costs more but conveys seriousness and depth.
How to choose correctly
Always start from the message, not the format: one idea → flyer; a few linked sections → folded brochure; a full story with detail → booklet. Budget and distribution method matter too. At shadowforge we design the layout in the right format and deliver it print-ready, with the fold and bleed clearly marked for your printer.