This card comes with square envelopes that require additional postage above and beyond standard first class postage. This format is NOT eligible for our mailing service due to the increased postage.
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Description
Too often people send out holiday cards that are so serious they seem to miss the fun and joy of the season, but with our newly released Fun Photos Holiday Cards, you can break the trend. Instead of boring your friends and family with the same old holiday cards, surprise them with a modern family holiday card this year. The fronts of these photo friendly holiday cards give you multiple chances to show every silly side of your family. In bold letters each Fun Photo Holiday Card wished everyone a ‘Happy Everything.’ The back design allows more photo opportunities and a personalized holiday greeting. Alternate back design templates may be available. All Paper Culture cards are printed on high-quality, recycled paper.
See how Paper Culture compares to Tiny Prints, Minted, Shutterfly, & Snapfish
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Details
- Card Type
- Flat Card
- Card Size
- Square Cards 5.1" - Flat
- Paper
- 145lb, 100% post-consumer recycled paper
- Envelopes
- White envelopes made from 100% post consumer recycled paper.
- Delivery Options
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Shipped To You
$8.99 flat-rate (via Ground) - Price Per Card
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- 1-1
- $3.49
- 2-9
- $3.49
- 10-29
- $2.89
- 30-59
- $2.59
- 60-99
- $2.39
- 100-199
- $2.19
- 200-299
- $2.09
- 300+
- $1.99
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Designer
My name is Carmen Nácher. I am a spanish graphic designer who has been living in Germany for almost 4 years. I studied graphic design in the EASD of Valencia, the city where I was born. In September 2012, I moved to a little city from Germany, Münster, where I made a 2 semester scholarship while I was working simultaneously in my degree final work. This work was a book which would let further foreign students know a little more about the city and faculty of Münster. After submitting my final work in Valencia, I came back to Germany, but this time I went to Cologne, where I studied the german language in an Intensiv way for almost 5 months. After that, I discovered an art gallery, SSZ Süd, in wich I had the opportunity of taking a 6 months internship, and learn a lot more from one of my biggest vocation, photography. In this time, I also had the pleasure to show some of my photographs among more young photographers in the Glasgow galery The Lighthouse, organised by the independent charity Saxa Arts Trust. Once I ended my internship at the art gallery, I started another internship at Bel Epok, a design and communication Agency based in Cologne. In my time at Bel Epok, I had the chance to learn lot of new things and move among different design areas like design conception, Layout development for printed products, Packaging, Illustration, Photo concept and Logo development. After my internship, I continued working in the Agency with a one-year-contract as a Junior Art Director. It was in this time when I completely realised that graphic design was my thing. That I choosed well, and that I wanted to work as a graphic designer for the rest of my life. Currently, I work as a freelance, and I am always open to new attractive offers that I consider they can make me grow in both professional and personal way. To conclude, I would like to explain where my inspiration come from. One thing that I consider really important and that I do constantly is to be updated to the new tendencies. I spend lots of my time in internet surfing through every kind of website that I find inspirational. From art and design webs and blogs to sites which display the everyday and the intereses from different kind of people. I think it’s important to know what the people are thinking in general, what are they liking, what are they looking at in the last days. I also find inspiration by taking Photos. I take long walks to make Photos, and I think in the moment you decide to pay attention to those forms and colors both from nature and human constructions, or just things you find on the way, I think you keep it somehow back in your mind, whith the chance to pop up at some point involuntarily while working on something else that could have some kind of relation.