~Eda Holt, Margarets

Just a little thank you for the beautiful artwork for “Hope For A Cure” in the recent issue.  Your magazine reaches soooo many readers that we could not possible reach.

Have had a lot of comments already!

Sincerely
~Eda Holt, Margarets

Peter Barcus, Director of Hospice Alamance Caswell

It looks so good!  I will have a few editorial corrections, but at first glance, wow!: First newsletter I did for them

Looks great!: Spring 2009 newsletter

Great job!  Thanks: Fall 2009 newsletter

Hey Myra  – here’s the spring stuff.  Do your magic, girl!: Spring 2010 newsletter

~Snippets of emails from Peter Barcus, Director of Hospice Alamance Caswell

~Tracey Hurley

What a wonderful job you did photographing our house for the January issue of Alamance Magazine. You truly did show it at its best. Thank you for your encouragement and professionalism.
~Tracey Hurley

~Ethan Moyer

Thank you for allowing me to come in and shadow you on Thursday.  I also thank you for allowing me to get some hands-on experience by allowing me to help on some ads and an article.  I look forward to coming back!

~Ethan Moyer

I am guilty of these…

I am guilty of these…

guilty
1. You’ve almost rear-ended the car in front of you because you were analyzing a font on a billboard.

2. You get pissed when a free Photoshop brush you download is less than 1000px in size.

3. You’d rather study the paisley pattern on your boyfriend/girlfriend’s shirt than listen to what he/she has to say.

4. You can use keyboard shortcuts at light speed, blindfolded, but you can’t type a paragraph of text without staring at the keyboard.

5. You’ve had “Software Nightmares,” when you’ve been working way too much.

colortv6. You consider meals interruptions.

7. You’ve learned your lesson and stopped using the word “final” in any file name when saving.

8. You clean your keyboard more often than you wash your car.

9. You’ve intentionally given up trying to explain your projects to non-designers.

10. You see CMYK and RGB like Neo sees the Matrix.

11. You’d rather organize your desktop than your sock drawer.

12. When you heard that Adobe was acquiring Macromedia, you had a Design Orgasm.

13. When you look at Album art all you see are grunge Photoshop Brushes. (Then you see the album art a couple minutes later)

cd14. You’ve Photo shopped out a watermark for a comp or mock-up.

15. You’ve actually $paid for a font.

16. You’ve totally slaughtered a great design concept because the client thinks he/she knows best. (everyone thinks they are a designer)

17. The amount of words you’ve written with a sharpie labeling burned discs total more than the amount of words you’ve read in novels.

18. You’ve had to explain to a client that a layered file wasn’t part of the deal.

19. You’ve kept a ragged concert ticket just so you could scan it.

20. You’ve nicknamed the OSX spinning wheel. (and not affectionately)

21. You bookmark a resource more often than you have a fun night out on the town.

help22. You’ve intentionally overbid a project because you can sniff out a bad client from a mile away.

23. You can’t go to a restaurant without secretly critiquing the menu design.

24. You have an amazingly huge font collection, and an amazingly short temper.

25. If you had a penny for every mouse click, you would have been a trillionaire 3 years ago.

Business Cards

Business Cards

Business Cards

Why Should You Have Business Cards?
  They are good conversation starters with the LOOK and DESIGN…

                  AND they are good reminders of who
                    “whatshername” was,

                      AND why you need to RECONNECT.
                              (I admit, I’m bad with names…)

business-cards

We’ll help your card be one that they KEEP and REMEMBER!

color-chartTypes of Ink

Raised Ink
Flat
Black Ink
One Color
Two Colors
Full Color

card-shapesSizes & Shapes

US Standard: 2″ x 3.5″
Square: 2″ x 2″
Slim Cards: 1.75″ x 3.5″
Round Corners: 2″ x 3.5″
Leaf: 2″ x 3.5″
Half Circle Side: 2″ x 3.5″
Circle: 2″ diameter

 

redProper Business Card Etiquette

  • Whenever you give a business card, ask for a business card.
  • When given a business card, don’t just take it and place it in your pocket. Make the person feel important by looking at their card for a few seconds. You might see something that could be a topic of discussion.
  • Write comments on the card such as date, location and common points of interest. These comments will prove valuable when following up with that person. This also demonstrates a sincere interest in the other person.
  • Place them in your wallet. This lets them know they reside in a special place with you. Make people feel important, in order to make yourself important to them.

Business cards can be dated as far back as the 15th century. Known as the visiting card or a calling card in the 17th century, they were used to make sure names were correctly announced when entering a social. It was a social convention that was bound by some very strict etiquette rules. In today’s society, they are used as a common practice between business and the public.

Want to talk about your business cards? Send us an email and we’ll respond ASAP!
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