It's true. Another year has rolled around and you're again facing the task of making Christmas cards. However you do it this year-or maybe you won't actually make them, but buy them ready-made-it is time to settle on that decision, and get the job in gear.
You have always been one to enjoy making Christmas cards on your own. While you have broken down during a few seasons and just taken the fastest route-to the local store aisle where boxed Christmas cards were sold-you prefer to start early enough to really get into making Christmas cards. Your creativity gene begs for the chance and only time can get in the way now and then.
This year, you're starting early enough; making Christmas cards is a definite task on your holiday "to do" list. There will be no store-bought cards this time around so the decision-making process isn't centered on to buy or to make, but on how to go about making Christmas cards that suit your needs and tastes. There are quite a few options available to you. It used to be that if you were into making Christmas cards, you pulled out the construction paper, ribbons and bows, sparkle dust and colored pens and got busy.
There are still many purists who choose to go about making Christmas cards one by one by one, completely by hand. And that is an almost always beautiful way to go about it. Yet there are some folks, and you are one of these, who still want to hold onto that sense of making Christmas cards yourself-infusing your cards with your personality-but you don't have the time to get into it on a single-card basis, and do the best job. You have a long list of people to whom you send cards, family and friends and business associates, and to hand-make a card for each one of them would possibly take most of the year, and maybe then some.
So instead you opt to use an online printer to partner with you to get the job done well. You feel as if you are still making Christmas cards that speak to you and your personal belief system while being able to produce them in large enough numbers to cover all the cards you need to post. It's most definitely the best of both worlds and you actively take every single opportunity such a process affords you.
For example, by using an online printer for making Christmas cards, you are able to lay out your card exactly as you want it to look through the use of your printer's templates. You have a vast library of holiday artwork from which to choose to grace the front of your creation, or you can upload your own graphics, if you have something special. It's your choice because you are making Christmas cards on your own terms. The font you use, the color of ink you add, the background colors and potential borders or other adornments-all of this is not only under your direction, it is being done by you personally. You are making Christmas cards, these Christmas cards, so design them to your exact specifications.
Making Christmas cards is personally satisfying, and you feel so very proud of your creation when you see the final product . . . all of it as a result of your imagination.