180 years of innovation and craft
From the foothills of the English Lakes District to the forefront of global innovation, James Cropper has spent 180 years pushing boundaries, shaping industries and making a material difference. This year, the sixth-generation family business celebrates nearly two centuries of papermaking excellence and advanced materials, with festivities at its Burneside mill, where employees and their families came together to honour a legacy built across generations.
Founded in 1845, James Cropper has grown from its Cumbrian roots in Burneside to a global group, with sites in Cornwall, Crewe, and Schenectady, USA. Across generations, its people have earned an international reputation for colour mastery, craftsmanship, technical excellence and sustainable innovation, a culture that continues to define the business today.
That spirit of restless curiosity has shaped defining moments in the company’s history: producing paper for the British government during WWI, supplying the iconic red paper for Remembrance Day poppies and welcoming Her Majesty The Queen in 2013 to open the revolutionary CupCycling® plant – the world’s first facility dedicated to recycling coffee cups at scale.
Today, that same mindset drives its pioneering work in advanced materials. From high-performance nonwovens and electrochemical materials used to deliver clean energy, aerospace and medical applications, to Moulded Fibre packaging that accelerates the shift to circular packaging, James Cropper’s innovations are helping address the world’s most urgent challenges.
The company’s passion for colour remains as strong as ever. Since creating its first coloured paper in the 1850s, it has honed its craft to an unmatched level. Its state-of-the-art colour lab now offers more than 2,000 live shades, including 184 blacks and 62 whites, with limitless potential for designers and brands. Most recently, it unveiled Coloursource, a collection of 50 signature shades honed over half a century, available in numerous weights and embossed patterns.