christmas-cards

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  • Icy Veins opens final voting for annual Christmas Card Contest

    by 
    Anne Stickney
    Anne Stickney
    12.23.2013

    Icy Veins, home of some of the most popular and up to date class and raid guides, has opened up the final round of voting for their annual Christmas Card Contest. The contest asked for the best original WoW-themed Christmas Cards that readers could come up with, and did readers ever deliver -- out of a staggering 159 entries, 20 were chosen to move on to the final round for voting. Winners of the contest will receive some amazing prize packages from J!NX, TypeFrag, Curse, Ask Mr. Robot and Blizzard. But that's enough about the prizes. What's really cool are the cards themselves, a stunning array of artwork, screenshots, and even some real-life photography thrown in for good measure. From wryly funny to incredibly sweet, the wide variety makes the ultimate winner pretty much anyone's guess. To check out the entries and vote, take a look at the official thread on Icy Veins. Voting ends on December 25, so don't dawdle if you'd like your vote to count. Congratulations in advance to the winners!

  • Using Pages to print Christmas card labels

    by 
    Steve Sande
    Steve Sande
    12.10.2013

    Unless you just have a handful of people that you send Christmas cards to -- or you're lucky enough to have friends and relatives who are happy with receiving a phone call or email for the holidays -- you may have the annual task of sending out a pile of cards. Before computers came along, my wife and I used to hand-write the address onto every envelope... To make life easier, I eventually created a set of labels in Microsoft Word that would print out onto Avery labels, and I just update that list every year to print out another set. This year, I wanted to do it with Pages as I'd love to eventually be able to just grab my iPad, load the printer with the Avery sticky labels, and have 'em done in a few minutes. Here's a how-to on printing creating labels in Pages for OS X -- and once you've created them on a Mac, you can open up that document on your iPad or iPhone. 1) Find a label format you like. Here, I suggest going out to the Avery website and using their Label Selector wizard. You can specify the type of label, the number you want to print per page, the type of printer (laser or inkjet) and other factors, at which point it gives you an idea of the labels to buy. You can pick 'em up at your local Office Max/Office Depot/Staples, as they usually have a good selection of the label stock on hand. I personally like the Avery 8160 labels, which come in a pack of 750. Others might select the 5660 laser labels, which are clear. You might wonder why I wouldn't just use the Avery label templates. Well, all of them are in Microsoft Word format, and when opened in Pages, you get some odd results ... like two pages of misaligned labels. The process described here really doesn't take too long, and you'll be an expert with the table tool in Pages when you're done. 2) Take some measurements Once you've purchased your labels, measure the following dimensions: Margin on left, right, top and bottom of page Spacing between labels (horizontally; there's usually no space between the labels vertically) The height and width of the labels 3) Launch Pages for OS X First thing we need to do is select a document type. I chose a "Blank" document (it's in portrait orientation). Select that from the Choose a Template dialog, then click Choose. 4) Set Document Margins Choose View > Inspector > Document Setup from the menu. Uncheck header and footer, and set the document margins to the dimensions you measured in Step 2. For my labels, those measurements were .18" on the left and right sides of the labels, and .5" at the top and bottom. 5) Add a table We're going to use a table to hold the text for the labels. Click the Table button on the toolbar and select a format. Don't worry about the shading; we'll get rid of it later. By default, Pages added a table that was 4 columns across and 5 rows high. We need to match the labels -- three across with two spaces or five columns total, and 10 rows. Add another column by right-clicking on any one of the column headers and selecting either Add Column Before or Add Column After (see below). In this example, I now have five columns. To add rows, I click on any cell in the table to see the column and row headers, then click on the button below the last row (it looks like a circle with an equal sign in it). A number picker appears (see below), and I click the "up arrow" until the number of rows is 10. 6) Change the table cell dimensions The first thing we need to do is make columns B and D -- which will be the horizontal spaces between the labels -- .16" wide. Click on the header for column B, then Command-Click the header of column D. Move the cursor to the right side of the header for column B until it turns into a double-sided arrow, then click and drag the column border to the left until the dimension is .16". Your other selected column, D, will also become smaller. Now we need to make the columns A, C and E the same width as our labels; in this case, that's 2.6". I click on the header for column A, then Command-Click on the header of columns C and E. Next, I move my cursor to the right side of the header for column A until it turns into a double-sided arrow. At this point, I can click and drag the column border to the right until the dimension figure is 2.6". Note that my other selected columns, C and E, will also expand. Lastly, we need to increase the height of the rows to match our label height -- in this case, 1.0". To do this, I click on a cell in the first row to show the column and row headers, then I hover my cursor over the both of the Row 1 header until it turns into a double-ended arrow, this time pointing up and down. Drag the row border down until the vertical dimension is 1.0" (see below). Unfortunately, you need to do this separately to each row. 7) Get rid of the cell shading Select View > Inspector > Format from the menu, when you see the sidebar appear, click on Table, then uncheck Alternating Row Color (see below). This should give you an "all white" label with a thin black border. 8) Save the document At this point, save this document -- either onto your Mac or onto iCloud -- so you don't lose your work. 9) Add more pages of labels Unless you have a lot of friends and relatives who are happy to exchange Christmas greetings electronically, you may need more than one page for your labels -- including a page for return address labels. Adding more labels is as simple as clicking in one cell, choosing Edit > Select All from the menu, then choosing Copy (Command-C), clicking outside of the table at the very bottom of the page, and then doing a Paste (Command-V). The second batch of labels is pasted onto a new page, although with the wrong column widths and placement -- you'll need to move them around a bit and check the column widths and row heights until you get your labels just right. Then repeat to add even more pages of labels to your document. For a friend of mine who needs a lot of labels, I created an empty document that had ten pages -- that's 300 -- labels. Me? I don't have that many friends. :-( 10) Add addresses Before you start adding addresses, let's do one more thing: go into the sidebar in Pages and uncheck "Resize rows to fit cell contents". This insures that if you accidentally put too much information into a cell or increase the text size too much, you won't accidentally knock your labels out of whack. Now just start typing into the cells. You can click "Text" in the sidebar to change fonts, sizes, styles. You can even paste in some little graphics if you'd like. I found a nice holly PNG file with a quick Google search, and inserted it into my cells (below). 11) Remove grid lines prior to printing OK, now it's time to do one last thing -- get rid of those grid lines on the tables. To do this, select one cell on each page and then click the "Grid Lines" buttons in the sidebar (Table) to make the grid lines go away. 12) Test printing Before you waste some of those expensive labels, be sure to make a test print. Print your completed document on paper, and then put it behind the labels to make sure that things line up. You may find that addresses are too close to the borders, in which case you can consider using the text indentation tools in the sidebar to move text to the right. That's it. You still have some time to get your labels typed in and printed out, so you have no excuse for not sending out those holiday greetings. Get to work!

  • 2008 holiday card blowout, now with exclusive music!

    by 
    Kevin Kelly
    Kevin Kelly
    12.23.2008

    click for all the Holiday cheer! var digg_url = 'http://digg.com/gaming_news/Joystiq_s_2008_gaming_industry_Holiday_card_spectacular'; It's that time of year: delayed travel, cold weather, spiked egg nog, and holiday gaming cards from the video game industry. They range from Konami's fairly plain jane attempt (No Snake? No Hideo?), all the way up to the custom old-school card created for us by The Minus World. What, no $20 gift card love from Sony this year? (But they did give us their AC Adapter peripheral.) At least Sony tried -- where's the love Microsoft, Nintendo? We'll even accept some coal -- just send us something for the holidays! Please?Foundation 9 wins the award for the niftiest card so far this year. It sent out a holiday card with an exclusive CD inside, complete with 11 tracks of holiday chip tune music created by 8 Bit Weapon, Leeni, Computeher, and others. We've got an exclusive track that you can enjoy without leaving the warm comfort of this post. Check out Doctor Octoroc's version of "We Three Kings" right here. Happy Holidaze! Some notable cards: "Barack O'Clause" from Reverb Communications LittleBigChristmas from SCEA Christmas Kingdom Hearts from Square Enix Little Sister figurine from 2K Games Christmas Cthulu from Penny-Arcade A Fallout Christmas by Bethesda %Gallery-39789%

  • Send Christmas cards in Second Life from outside (even without an account!)

    by 
    Eloise Pasteur
    Eloise Pasteur
    12.11.2007

    Are you a Second Life widow or widower? Do you have the artistic talent of a goose, or are flat broke in Second Life and want to send cards?Well, thanks to Sqoo and DaveDub you can. All you do is put in your name, your friend's email, a message and choose a picture and hit send. They get an email directing them to the website, which gives them a slurl and when they follow it, they get given your card, all neatly delivered in world. The picture is on the front, it's signed (e.g. from Eloise Pasteur) also on the front, and if they click on the card, and when they rez it, it will read out your message. At five prims a time (It uses what looks like 10 character xytext for your signature - you might be in trouble if you have a really long name too) it won't take many to fill your typical house, but it is a nice thought, especially if you can't or don't get into Second Life.The service is free. They could use it to spam your friend, in world or out, but nothing is completely safe, and there are lots of ways for people to block the spam in world too - so it's probably not that risky. It's nicer to the planet than all that paper, and helps if you missed the posting deadlines too!