Avery Design & Print Online is the best way to design and print your own custom labels and more, with no software needed. To get started, just create an Avery.com account, choose the type of product you want to use — from address labels, to stickers, gift tags, and more, select a templated design or create your very own, customize it, upload.
Contacts User Guide
You can print mailing labels, envelopes, or a list of contacts using information in the Contacts app.
Print mailing labels
In the Contacts app on your Mac, select contacts or a group.
Only contact cards with addresses will be printed.
If you want to print a return address label, select your contact card.
Choose File > Print.
Click the Style pop-up menu, then choose Mailing Labels.
If you don’t see the Style pop-up menu, click Show Details near the bottom-left corner.
Click Layout or Label to customize mailing labels.
Layout: Choose a label type, such as Avery Standard or A4. Or choose Define Custom to create and define your own label.
Label: Choose additional items to include on labels. For example, you can:
Print labels in alphabetical order or by postal code
Include the company name and country or region
Include an image
Change the font and font color
Click Print.
To change the order of the first and last name in mailing labels, change the setting of the Show First Name option in Change General preferences.
Tip: Want to print the same address on a page of labels? Create a group that contains the contact card with the address you want to print. Copy and paste the card in the group as many times as you need. Then select the group and print.
Print envelopes
In the Contacts app on your Mac, select contacts or a group.
Only contact cards with addresses will be printed.
Choose File > Print.
Click the Style pop-up menu, then choose Envelopes.
If you don’t see the Style pop-up menu, click Show Details near the bottom-left corner.
Click Layout, Label, or Orientation to customize envelopes.
Layout: Choose a standard envelope size from International, North American, or Japanese layouts. Or for a nonstandard envelope size, choose Define Custom to create and define your own layout.
Label: Choose additional items to include on envelopes. For example, you can:
Include your return address (it must appear on your contact card) Rosetta stone digital download.
Print an envelope for a specific address (such as work) or all addresses (for contacts who have multiple addresses)
Print envelopes in alphabetical order or by postal code
Include the company name and country or region
Include an image
Change the font and font color
MacFamilyTree 9 is the largest update we've ever released for our popular genealogy software. Version 9 comes with a huge number of new features and improvements. MacFamilyTree makes it easy to enter and then visualize your family history. Be it creating reports, diagrams or browsing your data in the innovative 3D view called Virtual Tree - MacFamilyTree offers a solution for every task. No matter how you want to document your findings, MacFamilyTree 9 is the perfect genealogy solution for you. Display your relationships in reports, visually appealing charts, or the innovative Virtual Tree 3D view, or invite other users to contribute to your family tree in real time by using the free 'CloudTree Sync&Share' feature. MacFamilyTree lets you create detailed statistics about your family tree. For example, you'll be able to see the average age at which your ancestors got married or passed away.
Orientation: Print envelopes in portrait or landscape orientation.
Click Print.
Print lists
In the Contacts app on your Mac, select contacts or a group.
Choose File > Print.
Click the Style pop-up menu, then choose Lists.
If you don’t see the Style pop-up menu, click Show Details near the bottom-left corner.
Choose the paper size and orientation, then select the information (attributes) to include in the list.
Click Print.
You can’t print directly from a network directory service. To print contacts from a directory, first drag them to another account.
Mac Label Printing Software
The Great Debate: Mac vs. PC
They say you’re either a Mac person or a PC person… and people will certainly defend their opinion on the matter! Both Mac’s and PC’s work fine and these days, and many of their functions are quite similar, so people’s preferences can be split right down the middle.
Some of us can still remember when “computers” started to become a household word. You can’t forget the first ones―bulky boxes with black screens and glowing green text. That was it. We’ll bet you can still remember sitting down in front of a computer for the first time. Everything was completely foreign compared to your trusty old typewriter. And yet, people would clamor to use them, and siblings were even known to fight over them.
Over time, technology continued to advance and computers became more and more a part of our everyday lives. Laptops started to emerge, just as we were beginning to get comfortable with desktop models. We were making the transition to flat screens, rather than the huge and heavy tank-like screens of the early 90’s!
If you had to split your time between a Mac and a PC you would find the Mac to be completely different in layout and functionality. You couldn’t even understand the mouse – no right/left click… hmmmm. And yet many of us had a love triangle between their PCs and Macs. For instance, if you were into graphic design like some of our people here at EIM are, you needed a Mac for your artistic endeavors, and yet your company probably was more in-tune with PC’s for office programs.
So, what IS the real difference between the two, anyway? Well it’s pretty simple really… it mostly comes down to what operating system they run on. PCs generally use Windows (7, XP, Vista, etc.) Operating Systems (as well as Linux, Solaris, etc.) and Macs usually run on Mac OS X (Macintosh Operating System), but now they can run Windows as well. As with most comparisons, they each have respective strengths and weaknesses, but are remarkable none-the-less!
The main issue most people come across when using one computer or another is software compatibility. There is still a lot of application software out there that runs specifically on one type of operating system and not the other.
When it comes to our customers printing their own labels, we offer BarTender® Label Design and Printing Software that is run on Windows.
HOWEVER―a common question we get asked is whether we have any label printing software for Macs. People who own and use Macs are generally aware that the software their PC-using friends have will probably not be compatible with their Macs. When you want to do more than create an electronic copy of a single barcode on your Mac, then you will want to consider some more advanced software options:
• Belight Software Labels and Addresses: An inexpensive Mac program that lets you print labels using a Zebra printer and a database. An extra advantage to this program is that it can be used to print envelopes and postcards with a laser or inkjet sheet-form printer.
• Peninsula Software’s LabelBase Thermal: More expensive, but compatible with both Mac OSX (including Lion and Mountain Lion) and PC (XP, Vista or Windows 7). Designed for thermal printers, it not only helps you layout and print labels, but it is able to store database information.
• A third option relies on using a Mac-PC compatible utility such as Boot Camp, Parallels or VMWare Fusion to run Zebra Designer that comes free with Zebra printers or Seagull’s BarTender® to print to any supported printer.
Technology is a wonderful thing, and it is constantly changing and evolving―becoming much more user-friendly. So, there’s no need to worry! Just because EIM’s BarTender® Software is meant for PC operating systems doesn’t mean Mac users don’t have label software options too. That’s the beauty of the modern computer age we live in!