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Greeting Card Designer is a collection of tools that are designed to work with Adobe Photoshop making the process of creating greeting cards simple and quick.  You can create a greeting card using your own image in a matter of seconds. 

Printing Problems?

Are you having printing problems with your cards when they look right in Photoshop?  If you're not careful with the printer driver settings you may be having alignment problems with your cards.  Here is a white paper that will help you with printing issues.

Support for CS2 Version

Documentation

Step by Step Installation Instructions

Need a little more help installing the program files than what's in the Users Guide.  Try the Step by Step instructions for installation.

FAQ

Q. Why do I have to crop the image before I run the action?
A.  By having you crop the image first, you maintain total creative control over where the image is cropped.  If this process were automated you would run the risk of cutting out important elements in your image. 
Q. Why are the crop sizes so odd?
A.  The crop sizes are dependent upon the size of the card stock being used and the non-printable margin that is present on desktop inkjet printers.  The odd crop sizes maximize the image area without encroaching on the unprintable margin of the printer.
Q.  Do these actions replace the actions I received with Photoshop?
A.  No.  When you load the actions you are simply adding a new action group to your Actions Palette.
Q.  I tried to run an action but go the error message "The object "Layer "Image" is not currently available.
A.  There are some actions provided that require you to create a card using one of the standard actions first.  The standard actions are those that have the card dimensions and the orientation in the name.  The other actions, including all the Extras! actions that you may have downloaded when you registered the product, can only be run on Photoshop files that have been processed by one of the standard actions.  
These actions include; Window Card Landscape, Window Card Portrait, Picture Frame and any Extras! actions.

Support for Elements 4 Version

documentation

FAQ

Q. Why do I have to crop the image before I run the action?
A.  By having you crop the image first, you maintain total creative control over where the image is cropped.  If this process were automated you would run the risk of cutting out important elements in your image. 
Q. Why are the crop sizes so odd?
A.  The crop sizes are dependent upon the size of the card stock being used and the non-printable margin that is present on desktop inkjet printers.  The odd crop sizes maximize the image area without encroaching on the unprintable margin of the printer.

 

 


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