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Printing business cards
I am designing a new business card using PS Elements. In the past when I
had a design complete I imported the design into Word, because Word had templates for printing from business card stock. Is there an easier way, to print multiple cards right from Elements, or Photoshop? |
#2
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Printing business cards
On Wed, 05 Nov 2008 12:46:08 -0600, Don Stauffer
wrote: I am designing a new business card using PS Elements. In the past when I had a design complete I imported the design into Word, because Word had templates for printing from business card stock. Is there an easier way, to print multiple cards right from Elements, or Photoshop? I buy Avery Clean Edge business card at Office Depot. Avery provides free templates to print them. Create the design/copy in PSE, save it as a jpg file, and import the file into the template. Print. -- Tony Cooper - Orlando, Florida |
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Printing business cards
Don Stauffer wrote:
I am designing a new business card using PS Elements. In the past when I had a design complete I imported the design into Word, because Word had templates for printing from business card stock. Is there an easier way, to print multiple cards right from Elements, or Photoshop? I guess you could create an 8.5 x 11 image with 10 card images on it. I've done a lot of business card printing, and I always do it from Word. I stopped using the Avery templates and made my own table which is sub-divided into more rows and columns for stuff like phone numbers, e-mail addresses, URLs, name, title, and a logo. I can also micro-adjust the margins to match the printer. I stopped buying the business card stock, and instead use Costco ink jet photo paper in my laser printer and a wheel type paper cutter. If you can find a cheap place for color photocopies that will accept a file (word or PDF) then you can make full color cards pretty cheaply. One place near me charges 29 cents a page for color copies. Bring your own card stock paper. |
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Printing business cards
On Wed, 05 Nov 2008 12:46:08 -0600, Don Stauffer wrote:
I am designing a new business card using PS Elements. In the past when I had a design complete I imported the design into Word, because Word had templates for printing from business card stock. Is there an easier way, to print multiple cards right from Elements, or Photoshop? I generally generate mine with a postscript file - quite easy, if you know PS. |
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Printing business cards
ray wrote:
On Wed, 05 Nov 2008 12:46:08 -0600, Don Stauffer wrote: I am designing a new business card using PS Elements. In the past when I had a design complete I imported the design into Word, because Word had templates for printing from business card stock. Is there an easier way, to print multiple cards right from Elements, or Photoshop? I generally generate mine with a postscript file - quite easy, if you know PS. I use TeX, the typesetting program, to generate the PostScript... -- Floyd L. Davidson http://www.apaflo.com/floyd_davidson Ukpeagvik (Barrow, Alaska) |
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Printing business cards
tony cooper wrote:
On Wed, 05 Nov 2008 12:46:08 -0600, Don Stauffer wrote: I am designing a new business card using PS Elements. In the past when I had a design complete I imported the design into Word, because Word had templates for printing from business card stock. Is there an easier way, to print multiple cards right from Elements, or Photoshop? I buy Avery Clean Edge business card at Office Depot. Avery provides free templates to print them. Create the design/copy in PSE, save it as a jpg file, and import the file into the template. Print. Is this on a disk? My box of Avery card stock is several years old, and includes a booklet on how to use various word processing and spread sheet programs. I suppose I may have lost a disk, but sure do not remember one in the box. |
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Printing business cards
On Thu, 06 Nov 2008 09:07:55 -0600, Don Stauffer wrote:
tony cooper wrote: On Wed, 05 Nov 2008 12:46:08 -0600, Don Stauffer wrote: I am designing a new business card using PS Elements. In the past when I had a design complete I imported the design into Word, because Word had templates for printing from business card stock. Is there an easier way, to print multiple cards right from Elements, or Photoshop? I buy Avery Clean Edge business card at Office Depot. Avery provides free templates to print them. Create the design/copy in PSE, save it as a jpg file, and import the file into the template. Print. Is this on a disk? My box of Avery card stock is several years old, and includes a booklet on how to use various word processing and spread sheet programs. I suppose I may have lost a disk, but sure do not remember one in the box. Have you ever heard the term 'download'? I doubt they are going to put a disk in every package of labels - in fact some are way too small to hold one. Try Avery's web site. |
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Printing business cards
On Thu, 06 Nov 2008 09:07:55 -0600, Don Stauffer
wrote: tony cooper wrote: On Wed, 05 Nov 2008 12:46:08 -0600, Don Stauffer wrote: I am designing a new business card using PS Elements. In the past when I had a design complete I imported the design into Word, because Word had templates for printing from business card stock. Is there an easier way, to print multiple cards right from Elements, or Photoshop? I buy Avery Clean Edge business card at Office Depot. Avery provides free templates to print them. Create the design/copy in PSE, save it as a jpg file, and import the file into the template. Print. Is this on a disk? No. You download the template or do it online. See: http://www.avery.com/avery/en_us/Pro...ards/_/Ns=Rank My box of Avery card stock is several years old, and includes a booklet on how to use various word processing and spread sheet programs. I suppose I may have lost a disk, but sure do not remember one in the box. Just search for the template for the product number on the card stock you have. -- Tony Cooper - Orlando, Florida |
#9
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Printing business cards
Don Stauffer wrote:
Is this on a disk? My box of Avery card stock is several years old, and includes a booklet on how to use various word processing and spread sheet programs. I suppose I may have lost a disk, but sure do not remember one in the box. All you have to do is make a table in Word with ten cells, each 3.5" wide x 2" high, with top and bottom margins of 0.5" and right and left margins of 0.75" (be sure to go into "Table Properties" and set the row height to "Exactly" 2" rather than "at least" 2"). If you're using the Avery card stock then you may need to adjust the margins slightly to match your printer. I find it easier to just use non-scored card stock and then cut them with one of those precision paper cutters. I didn't get good results with the Avery template software, it was very flaky when I did a complex dual language business card that I use when traveling to China and Taiwan. See "http://i34.tinypic.com/2dr5mw6.jpg" Actually the process I use in Word is a bit more complicated because I start with a table with a lot of small cells then merge cells to get the field size I want, which makes it much easier to align each field. I also include margins for each card to avoid putting content too close to the edges. I did a detailed and illustrated 17 page document about making your own business cards in Microsoft Word that I presented to an organization I used to belong to. If you want I can e-mail the pdf to you. Send me your e-mail address (you can modify my e-mail address for "gmail" from "geemail." |
#10
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Printing business cards
On Thu, 06 Nov 2008 08:40:42 -0800, SMS
wrote: Don Stauffer wrote: Is this on a disk? My box of Avery card stock is several years old, and includes a booklet on how to use various word processing and spread sheet programs. I suppose I may have lost a disk, but sure do not remember one in the box. All you have to do is make a table in Word with ten cells, each 3.5" wide x 2" high, with top and bottom margins of 0.5" and right and left margins of 0.75" (be sure to go into "Table Properties" and set the row height to "Exactly" 2" rather than "at least" 2"). If you're using the Avery card stock then you may need to adjust the margins slightly to match your printer. I find it easier to just use non-scored card stock and then cut them with one of those precision paper cutters. I didn't get good results with the Avery template software, it was very flaky when I did a complex dual language business card that I use when traveling to China and Taiwan. See "http://i34.tinypic.com/2dr5mw6.jpg" Actually the process I use in Word is a bit more complicated because I start with a table with a lot of small cells then merge cells to get the field size I want, which makes it much easier to align each field. I also include margins for each card to avoid putting content too close to the edges. I did a detailed and illustrated 17 page document about making your own business cards in Microsoft Word that I presented to an organization I used to belong to. If you want I can e-mail the pdf to you. Send me your e-mail address (you can modify my e-mail address for "gmail" from "geemail." It's a horses-for-courses thing. For really professional cards, I'd have a print shop print them. For less demanding purposes, I find the Avery Clean-Cut cards to be very acceptable. I do all of the body of my cards in Photoshop and import that image into the Avery template. I use the template only because it positions the image on all of the cards on the sheet. It makes for very quick and simple printing. The only reason for me to go to the trouble you have is if I wanted the cards on some special stock. Avery cards are limited in card stock choices. Volume also makes a difference. I don't hand out many cards anymore, so the Avery cards are fine. If I was handing out 10 cards a day, I'd have them printed by a print shop. -- Tony Cooper - Orlando, Florida |
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