Soft Enamel VS. Hard Enamel Pins
Soft Enamel VS. Hard Enamel Pins, What is the Difference?
When making the Custom Pins with Enamel Paints, the most common question is: what’s the difference between soft vs. hard enamel pins (the two most popular styles)?
If you are a video lover, watch the video to get a quick answer.
Video Version of Soft Enamel VS. Hard Enamel Pins
For more information, please read on…
Quick Visual Distinction
Let’s get a quick understanding of Soft Enamel VS. Hard Enamel Pins, just judging from the surface:
The simple answer is that soft enamel has raised metal lines & recessed enamel, a textured and non-smooth surface.
The answer for hard enamel is a polished flat of metal and enamel, a non-textured and smooth surface.
If you have these two types of pins at hand, try to compare and observe them from the front view and the side view, and feel the difference in the surface with your fingers. You must have got the answer when you read here.
Want to deeply understand the differences? Please dive in.
In-depth Understanding
1. What are Enamel Pins?
➤ What are Soft Enamel Pins?
Although their name says otherwise, soft enamel pins are not soft to the touch. Soft enamel pins are a kind of enamel pin; they are also called die-struck pins. Based on stamped metal or die-struck metal, it can be electroplated with various metal colors, such as bright gold, bright silver, etc.
The debossed metal areas between metal edges are filled with various colored enamel paints, which are laid below the metal edges.
Each color is surrounded by metal edges. Its surface has an obvious sense of concavo-convex. You can feel the obvious roughness with your fingers. Its dimensional look is what makes so many people drawn to it.
➤ What are the Hard Enamel Pins?
Hard enamel pins are also called imitation Cloisonné pins, a kind of enamel pin. It is equivalent to the upgraded version of soft enamel.
The entire inside debossed metal area is filled with various colored enamel paints to the same even level as the metal edges.
The surface is repeatedly polished. Its surface has no obvious sense of concavity and convexity, and we can feel a slightly bumpy feeling while it has a similar texture to ceramics. The smooth surface makes it look more exquisite.
2. How Much Do Enamel Pins Cost?
➤ Soft Enamel Pins--Most Popular Style
The great-looking soft enamel pins with medium quality and charming texture are highly cost-effective and can be used for a versatile selection of shapes and sizes.
It is suitable for making all kinds of mid-range lapel pins.
Price as low as $0.35/PC. Check the price list of soft enamel pins
➤ Hard Enamel Pins--High Perceived Value
The high-quality hard enamel pins belong to the top-grade lapel pins. The smooth and exquisite surface gives people a luxurious feeling. The price is a bit higher than the soft enamel. It applies to company lapel pins and commemorative lapel pins.
The price is as low as $0.55/PC. Check the price list of hard enamel pins
3. How are Enamel Pins Made?
➤ Different Manufacturing Processes
Both use the same metal mold and will have vivid colors. The soft enamel mold can only be used for producing soft enamel pins, while the hard enamel mold can be used not only for the hard enamel process but also for the soft enamel process.
Let’s learn more about the difference in manufacturing processes.
How to Make Soft Enamel Pins VS. How to Make Hard Enamel Pins
The Manufacturing Flow: Soft Enamel Pins VS. Hard Enamel Pins

The Manufacturing Flow of Enamel Pins

➤ Different Surfaces of Finished Enamel Pins
Soft Enamel Pins are concave-convex, with a metal line or a metal surface raised
Hard Enamel Pins are filled with enamel paint to be flush and even level with the metal edges and polished to a smooth-to-the-touch surface.

Soft Enamel VS. Hard Enamel Pins
Notice: We can add a transparent epoxy resin coating to the surface of soft enamel pins to protect the surface and give the effect that the soft enamel is smooth(lose the sense of concave and convex).
Distinguishing Skill: Because of the refraction of light, the surface with an added epoxy resin coating will be bright with a sense of reflection. But the “flat one” is not the hard enamel one.
4. Durability: Soft VS. Hard Enamel Pins
After getting the finished product, let’s see which is more durable.
Under the same preservation method and conditions, hard enamel pins are more durable than soft enamel pins.
Hard Enamel Pins are preferred by those who want the more durable enamel pins. They have super high quality and resistance to scratching.
In terms of drafting and design, the enamel pin manufacturer does the same colors, details, and visual effects on either. The difference is how the end products feel and how shadowing or reflection alters the appearance of the finished pins.
You can choose one or the other based on aesthetic preference, as some crafts work better than others with either the manufacturing process.
At GS-JJ.com, we offer both soft and hard custom enamel pins for the lowest factory price. Ultimately, the custom lapel pins come down to your personal preference. You could pick the appearance and process that work best for your design.
If you are still unsure, contact us and let us know. As an enamel pin maker with 20 years of professional experience, GS-JJ can help you pick out the most suitable and best-looking one for your design.
The Differences: Soft vs Hard Enamel Pins
Pin manufacturers are constantly updating and iterating on different technical processes. As of now, there are no least ten types of pins, each with its own personalized characteristics.
The most classic styles are soft and hard enamel pins. The soft and hard here do not refer to the hardness of touch, but to the final effect of the pin. The following will bring you detailed knowledge about enamel pins.
Custom Lapel Pins VS Custom Acrylic Pins: How to Choose?
Were you aware that pins can consist of not just a metal material but a material made of acrylic, too? The differences between the two are significant, including hardness and weight, which you can feel directly.
A keychain is not better the heavier it is, or the lighter it is. So, how to choose these two different materials? The right choice will improve the experience and make it a win-win situation.





