+Madmack Posted December 23, 2004 Share Posted December 23, 2004 Does anyone have a "template" that they use for making Signature cards. I tried to download one from Avery but I'm not very good at using it. I want to make a card that has Clipart in the background and our team name and team members over the top of the clip art. Got any "idiot proof" ideas? Madmack Quote Link to comment
+zygote2k Posted December 23, 2004 Share Posted December 23, 2004 don't let an idiot design the card. Quote Link to comment
+fly46 Posted December 23, 2004 Share Posted December 23, 2004 You could always order from somewhere instead of making your own. Quote Link to comment
+SeventhSon Posted December 23, 2004 Share Posted December 23, 2004 Here's how I do it. I buy blank business cards by the sheet. Then using Word or MSWorks, get the template that matches the blanks. The way I'm doing it now is add the clipart to each one and print. Then start with a blank and add the text and run the same one thru. I'm still working on getting the text on the clipart. Haven't perfected it yet. One thing I did notice. When printing, it's a good idea to run a regular sheet of paper thru to see if things match up. Mine didn't and I wasted a sheet of cards. Good luck 7 Quote Link to comment
+EWDaron10 Posted December 23, 2004 Share Posted December 23, 2004 If you have Print Shop, it's easy to do using the business card templates. Here is the one I have made. You can then print it on the business card stock, or print it on magnet paper, which is what I do. I then spray it with 2 light coats of Krylon clear acrylic. Quote Link to comment
Azaruk Posted December 23, 2004 Share Posted December 23, 2004 I use CorelDraw. Make a double size card, design and print. Cut them out, fold in half, laminate - double-sided sig card! I use normal paper, which, when doubled as described, makes for a thick enough 'card' for the laminater pocket. I like the idea of a double-sided card, but had difficulty getting them to line up properly using pre-cut business card stock, hence the technique I use now. Hope this helps. Quote Link to comment
+ValleyRat & TillyMouse Posted December 23, 2004 Share Posted December 23, 2004 (edited) MSWord has a template for business cards. Just go to TOOLS|ENVELOPES AND LABELS and select the labels tab, then OPTIONS and scroll down to Business Cards APLI-1612. If you use this template, print a few on plain paper before using an expensive sheet of cards. You can hold the printed sheet in front of a bright light, with a sheet of blank cards behind it to confirm alignment. Pagemaker OR PrintShop are much better than a word-processing program for doing this. Want your customer/geocacher-friend to keep the card rather than throwing it away? Print a 3-column heading on the back that says: NAME................EMAIL ................PHONE ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ Edited December 23, 2004 by valleyrat Quote Link to comment
+Roberts-tribe Posted December 23, 2004 Share Posted December 23, 2004 MS Publisher can do it. It also has loads of templates. Quote Link to comment
+robert Posted December 23, 2004 Share Posted December 23, 2004 Like many have said, there are templates available. If you go to an office supply store, you'll likely get the AVERY brand of business cards. You should be able to download their template from their website and use that in Word. You can also get a ton of clip art at Microsoft's website: http://office.microsoft.com/clipart/default.aspx?lc=en-us Quote Link to comment
+TotemLake Posted December 23, 2004 Share Posted December 23, 2004 Mine is an image I did in Microsoft Image Composer. I then placed it in a text box as a background while in Header/Footer mode in Word so that I could cause it to print over the edges to get that edge-to-edge printing of the picutre that I used. Here are two examples: This is the latest one I'm dropping in caches. This is the first one I made and retired when I started distributing the other one. Quote Link to comment
+CYBret Posted December 23, 2004 Share Posted December 23, 2004 I make mine on cardstock and use Microsoft Publisher to set up my own template. Instead of using business cards I went a little bigger and made mine the size of trading cards (baseball cards). I get 8 per sheet. The front side is in color and has my picture s and the "Geocacher-U" logo and link. The back side is black and white and has my "stats" I also attach one of my signature lighthouse lapel pins to each card then seal them up in small ziplock baggies. Bret Quote Link to comment
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