This 12" release (pressed for A&M by CBS Aston-Clinton Aylesbury Bucks) was never shipped or came with a white die-cut paper inner-sleeve.
The pressing/Run came with the Custom design A side labels (sadly a small unobtrusive 45 in red would have been nice touch. (Nothing at all is better than some idiot's thick black marker pen 45 RPM as I saw written on a tatty copy at a recent Car Boot, )
The 12" custom art sleeves were double die-cut in two runs at the printers with each cut punched out off true centre of the sleeve and at seperate angle/positions, The effect was clever easy to do and very effective.
A&M were very inavitive with their releases, the 12" singles often came as limited editions in coloured vinyls virgin clear vinyl 10" editions custom artwork labels shaped discs etc.
The biggest mistake their Marketing dpet made with the BJ's was NOT having the UK pressing of Strawberry Letter in a run of Strawberry red vinyl , both the USA Promo and Commercial 12"s came in red vinyl.
This release would have really hit the spot in a matching red-pink vinyl, (would really be nice to know what CBS's rates were for coloured vinyls, bearing in mind that the regular vinyl used is carbon-black which in it's self is a colour "Carbon" being the key word, Virgin and original vinyl pellets are clear, ANY PVC that is NOT clear has had a colour/pigment added. A picture disc is virgin un-coloured vinyl with a double side printed 12" die cut paper design sandwiched in the middle of two clear cakes/bisquits/pucks.
The actual track is an absolute classic club floor filler. great track, great vocalists, produced by a serious legend and with the helpful writing tallents of the UK's very own ex-Heatwave member Rod Temperton, who, along with Mr "Soul Bossa-Nova" Jones would team up with Michael "before the damage" Jackson. Enough said.
Are you planning to upload the label scans for this? From the description in the notes mine may have a different label. I don't have an inner sleeve, and the cover has the word stomp with the "O" cut out. The "O" is formed by the label of the A side.