VulgrCo delivered a product that was decent overall, but not especially impressive once we got the stickers in hand. Our experience put them squarely in the middle of the pack. The stickers were not bad, and there were a few things they did well, but there were also enough quality issues to keep them from standing out.
The best part of the order was the color. The print itself looked good. Colors came through nicely, the design reproduced well, and at a glance the stickers had a solid visual impact. If you are mostly judging the product from a few feet away, or looking at the artwork and ink quality first, VulgrCo can make a pretty respectable first impression.
Where the product lost points for us was in the finishing.
The cuts looked a little frayed, and that immediately made the stickers feel less polished than better competitors. A clean cut edge matters more than a lot of people realize. Even when the print looks nice, rough or fuzzy edges can make the final product feel cheaper. That was part of the issue here. The stickers did not look terrible, but they also did not have that sharp, crisp, professionally finished appearance you want from a really good sticker order.
We also noticed that the cutline was a bit wonky. That inconsistency made the final shape feel less precise than it should have been. With custom stickers, especially die-cut stickers, the cut path is a big part of the product. A good sticker printer should make the cut feel intentional, balanced, and smooth around the artwork. In this case, the cutline did the job, but it was not especially refined. It felt a little off, and that kept the product from feeling premium.
That really sums up the VulgrCo experience well: the print side was better than the finishing side.
If all you care about is getting a colorful custom sticker that looks reasonably good, VulgrCo can probably get you there. But if you care about the full package — print quality, cut precision, edge cleanliness, and that more professional finished look — they start to feel more average. For us, this was not a disastrous product by any means. It was usable. It was fine. It just was not one of those orders where you open the package and immediately think, yes, this is excellent.
That distinction matters because the sticker market is crowded, and there are plenty of companies that can produce decent-looking color. What separates the better options is consistency and finish quality. Clean edges, accurate cutlines, and a more dialed-in final product are often what make one printer feel meaningfully better than another. VulgrCo, at least in our experience, did not quite reach that level.
Another way to put it is this: the stickers looked better in the print than in the craftsmanship. The artwork came across well, but the physical finishing made the product feel more middle-tier. That can be fine depending on what you need. For casual use, giveaways, fun personal projects, or lower-stakes sticker runs, VulgrCo may be perfectly acceptable. But if you are printing stickers for a brand, a store, or anything where presentation really matters, the finishing quality may leave you wanting more.
This is why we would describe VulgrCo as a middle-of-the-pack option. They are not at the bottom. The product was not poor overall. The color reproduction gave them a real positive. But when we look at the whole sticker as a finished product, not just the printed image, they fell short of the better options. The frayed cuts and slightly wonky cutline were enough to hold them back.
For some buyers, that tradeoff might be acceptable. If price, convenience, or trying a smaller shop is the priority, VulgrCo might still be worth considering. But from a quality standpoint, we would not put them near the top. There are better sticker companies out there if your goal is a cleaner, sharper, more professionally finished result.
What We Liked
The biggest strength was the print color. The sticker design reproduced well, and the colors had good visual appeal. The product did not look dull or muddy, which is often one of the first things people notice with sticker printing. On the print side, VulgrCo did a respectable job.
What We Did Not Like
The weaker part of the product was the finishing. The edges looked a little frayed, and the cutline felt slightly uneven. That made the stickers feel less clean and less premium than stronger competitors. The product was fine, but it lacked the precision that usually separates an average sticker from a really strong one.
Final Verdict
VulgrCo is okay, but there are better options.
Our order landed right in the middle of the pack. The color looked good, which gave the stickers some immediate appeal, but the frayed cuts and wonky cutline held the product back. The final result was usable and decent, but not especially polished.
If you just need a sticker that looks pretty good overall, VulgrCo may be enough. But if you want cleaner cutting, sharper finishing, and a more premium sticker feel, we would look elsewhere.