

Lever Arch binders come in six colors, allowing the classification of files by color. And the cost of expensive steel files is eliminated. Which means greater paper capacity per inch of filing space. No more attaching of hole-reinforcements! Another plus is that A 3” Lever Arch binder holds 525 sheets of paper-many more than a 3” ring binder.

Whereas papers are easily torn on a 3-ring binder filler, the compression clip on the Lever Arch Binders prevents the pages from moving. The ball and socket metals eliminate misalignment and snagged papers. Just open to the page where you wish to place a page, lift the lever and place the page on the two rings. The Lever Arch design allows you to quickly add or remove papers from any location in the binder, without removing other papers. The clever design of the binder accounts for much of the enthusiasm. The efficient, attractive, low cost and easy-to-access Lever Arch Binders, conveniently arranged on open shelving, is gaining popularity. In the past decade or so, however, that’s begun to change. In the United States, the usual way to file papers is in manila files, which in turn are organized into file pockets and then into file drawers. They are the standard way the A-4 paper-size world files their paper records. In the background of foreign films set in professional offices, you often see bookshelves full of neat rows of distinctive binders in various colors, with reinforced round holes the size of a quarter on their spine.
