Sears Business Card, and Home Improvement card

So, seeing a poster's approval earlier for a JCP business card, which I had NO clue they issued, got me wondering which other well known retailers  also issued "business"  store cards, other than the obvious ones we know like.... OM, OD, Staples, HD, Lowes, etc.. So I went on a little research hunt......Sears (backed by Citi), offers 4 cards. 1) Store card2) Mastercard3) Commercial One business store card4) Home Improvement Card (similar to Lowes or HD) Didnt know if anyone would find this information useful, but wanted to mention it if you didnt know about it. 

Creditaddict wrote:
We have LowesCiti has a cap on Inq's and my partner has exceeded that number and they are instantly declined and I tried EO and they will not overide despite the credit report and scores and current citi relationship... to me it's an epic F'up!780 and declined because of to many INQ's... BITE ME!~That is SO lame CA!!  really?   Have you guys tried Tractor Supply?  its also Cit backed as well, plus Citi just announed they are contining the business merger with them to provide the credit. 

Similar Messages

  • Contact Person and Business Address and Home address

    Could anyone explain me how Business and Home address are determined for Contact Person. Are this data stored with different person number for specific contact person? Is there any maintenance which tels which data should be copied to Business and Home address from Contact Person address data?

    Hi Tomasz
    Contact Person Info is maintained in the table KNVK.
    It is maintained through VAP2 transaction.
    When you assign a contact person to a Customer in XD02/01 the home and business addresses get copied from VAP1 (KNVK table).
    Pushpraj

  • I used to have an application in my iPhone 4 and 4s that captures business card and creates its content to my contacts. Its no longer working with my i5. Can you recommend me a new apps for this same function

    I used to have an application in my iPhone 4 and 4s that captures business card and creates its content to my contacts. Its no longer working with my i5. Can you recommend me a new apps for this same function

    Try CardMunch it works well for me

  • How do I set up a file (business card) in Illustrator CS6 to print front and back?

    I'm working on a double sided business card and I would like to know how to set up the file in Illustrator.
    Thanks

    CGDesigns,
    There is no need to set up the Artboards on top of each other.
    You may send it as is or as a two page PDF, one for each Artboard/Layer. The print shop can tell you exactly how they want it.

  • I have Pages 09 and I have  created a business card using the template but can't figure out how to duplicate it to the other 9 on the page Am and sure I am going to look daft coz its only the click of a button but I can't work it out Thanks

    I have Pages 09 and I have  created a business card using the template but can't figure out how to duplicate it to the other 9 spaces on the page. I am and sure I am going to look daft coz its only the click of a button but I can't work it out Thanks

    I do the following: Hold down the command key and highlight all the items to be reproduced. Then hold down option and drag the items from the first to each subsequent card.

  • Printing of a logo and text on business cards, paper, etc.

    Dear reader(s),
    Let me introduce myself; my name is Matthew Hennessy from the Netherlands and I mostly PhotoShop, Illustrate for a hobby (for the last 5 years).
    In the past 5 years I have learned a lot when it comes to designing, but this isn't enough. A few weeks ago my boss asked me to design a new logo and new text, with the intention of using it on business cards, brief paper and envelopes.
    Now here comes the part you have seen coming, I really need to know a few things about the printing process, and the settings necessary to make a 'print ready' file. I have already done some research, but still some things are very unclear to me. If any answers could be given to the following questions, that would be more than appreciated!
    Questions:
    1. Crop marks - I have seen a lot of tutorials on the internet where people refer to 'crop marks', why are these necessary? What are they? What are they used for? How can I set the preferences and how can I see if I use the 'crop marks' correctly?
    2. Trim marks - I have seen a few people talking about this. Are 'trim marks' the same as 'crop marks'?
    3. Bleeding - this is something I really try to figure out, and already did my best but I'm not getting any wiser! Example given of my problem:
    I'm planning to (when this comes to an end), order business cards, brief paper and envelopes on Vistaprint (Dutch site). The preferred size is 1. 90mm x 52mm (complete document) or 2. 87mm x 49mm (cut off).
    What is the difference between these two sizes? I suppose this has something to do with the bleeding, but what?
    Now this is what confuses me, and I don't think I'm the only one:
    3.1. I made a new document in Illustrator CS5, with the 'complete document' measurements 90mm x 52mm (300DPI, CMYK). Do I need to input bleeding before I push ok?
    3.2. I made a new document in Illustrator CS5, with the 'cut off document' measurements 87mm x 49mm (300DPI, CMYK). Do I need to input bleeding before I push ok?
    4. Is there a checklist or anything to do this perfectly? As you can imagine I don't want to mess this up.
    Any help will be greatly appreciated, e-mail contact would be great too: [email protected]
    Thank you for reading, I will be around to look for replies! Thanks again!
    - Matthew

    function(){return A.apply(null,[this].concat($A(arguments)))}
    1. Crop marks - I have seen a lot of tutorials on the internet where people refer to 'crop marks', why are these necessary? What are they? What are they used for? How can I set the preferences and how can I see if I use the 'crop marks' correctly?
    Forget so-called "Crop Marks." Crop Marks and Crop Region are Illustrator-specific terms. It's an Illustrator feature that creates a set of (grossly oversized) printable marks on the Artboard for the printing house to use as trim indicators and/or (depending on version) to define a region for output when you export the file in certain formats. Other programs in Illustrator's genre don't even have this feature because it's really not necessary. Historically, it was Illustrator's workaround for its lack of a proper bleed feature and single-page limitation. I never even use Illustrator's Crop Marks. If I want trim marks to print, I simply draw my own.
    Trim marks is an industry term. Trim marks are short hairlines which align to the edges at which you want the paper to be trimmed after printing, but are placed outside the actual trim rectangular area so that they get trimmed away. In most projects destined for offset printing, it's a good practice to draw proper trim marks in the bleed area of the page. The print dialog also provides a Printer Marks feature that will cause trim marks (among other things) to print outside the Artboard. (You don't need to worry about that in this scenario.)
    function(){return A.apply(null,[this].concat($A(arguments)))}
    2. Trim marks - I have seen a few people talking about this. Are 'trim marks' the same as 'crop marks'?
    So as explained above, Illustrator Crop Marks is an Illustrator feature commonly used to draw trim marks. I don't use that feature. It wastes space.
    function(){return A.apply(null,[this].concat($A(arguments)))}
    3. Bleeding - this is something I really try to figure out, and already did my best but I'm not getting any wiser! Example given of my problem:
    Bleed is an industry term that simply means you want ink to print "right to the edge of the paper." That's not actually possible on a commercial offset press. So if the design requires "right to the edge of the paper" printing, you cheat: You print on a larger-than-final-size sheet, put trim marks to indicate the final size of the piece, and design so that anything that is supposed to "print to the edge" actually extends beyond those trim marks. Theoretically, if the physical processes of commercial printing were perfect, you could draw your design "just to" the trim. But paper expands and shrinks with humidity changes, Press sheets jog around a bit as they get picked up by the suction lifts and grippers and shoved and squished between the rollers. (It's a mechanical miracle that the process works at all, and has for over a century. A full-size CMYK offset sheetfed press is a marvelous piece of engineering.) After printing and drying the sheet is trimmed at the trim marks, and the artwork that extends beyond the trim marks is chopped off.
    Typically in commercial offset printing, 1/8 inch of "extra artwork" beyond the trim is sufficient to allow for the inaccuracies of the process.
    Now here's the thing: If you are working in the traditonal manner with a commercial printing house, you know the press size and sheet size that will be used for the project. You can do all kinds of things at the design stage to minimize unnecessary work at the printing house by "designing for the press sheet." For example, in the press houses with which I work, I would never deliver a business card project output file as a single-card image on a single-card-sized page. No conventional offset printer is going print business cards one-card-at-a-time on 3.5 x 2 inch sheets. They are going to "gang" (step & repeat) multiple images of the card on one press sheet.
    Typically, I would know in advance the press sheet size that is going to be used and the necessary space for gripper and press sheet margins. I would set up the software page to the size of the press sheet and arrange multiple instances of the card in that space. I would draw my own trim marks for each card in the array. If the sheet size is such that it will result in alot of paper just going in the waste bin, I may design some other piece in the otherwise unused area (a bookmark or hangtag, for example) and thereby get an "almost free" second document out of the press run. If the cards is designed to be printed on both sides, I will often arrange the page to accommodate "work and turn" printing, wherein both sides of the card gets printing on one side of the sheet, the sheets are simply flopped over and run through the press again. That avoids the need for a second press setup.
    But since everybody and his third cousin's nephew is now a "designer," many printing houses have set up "click & drag" printing solutions on the web. Such solutions make it "quick & easy" (not necessarily cheaper) for the neophyte and "idiot proof" for the printer by removing the above-described flexibility and designing "one size fits all" workflows. That's what you're chasing with the Vistaprint vendor.
    function(){return A.apply(null,[this].concat($A(arguments)))}
    I'm planning to (when this comes to an end), order business cards, brief paper and envelopes on Vistaprint (Dutch site). The preferred size is 1. 90mm x 52mm (complete document) or 2. 87mm x 49mm (cut off).
    What is the difference between these two sizes? I suppose this has something to do with the bleeding, but what?
    In the Vistaprint .ai template for design-your-own business cards I just downloaded to see what you're talking about, they have the artboard set to accommodate a design with bleed. You don't have to design bleeding elements, but the space is there if you do.
    The AI Artboard (page) is 90 x 52 mm. Think of that as your bleed area. If there are elements in your design that you want to "print to the edge" of the finished card, draw them all the way to the edges of the Artboard. The printer is, in effect, telling you that if you do that, then you will be providing enough "extra" artwork to accommodate the inherent variances in the printing/triming process.
    The (grossly overthick) 87 x 49mm red rectangle is the trim. So it effectively is the "trim marks". It represents the final card after it is trimmed down to final size. That's the size your cards will be when delivered. That roughly coresponds to the 3.5 x 2 inch dimensions that are considered the norm in the US. I don't know about what's the convention in Europe, but assuming it is the same as in the US, that's the size you want the cards to be. Business cards that are even slightly oversized usually end up in the trash can because they often don't fit pockets in card-carriers or plastic sleeves.
    The (grossly overthick) blue rectangle is the so-called "safe area". That's nothing more than a suggested "safe design margin" between your artwork and the trim. The idea is that you are supposed to keep any elements of the design that you don't want to risk getting "too close" to the edges of the final piece--or even getting chopped off by the trim--within that rectangle. Magazines and newspapers are also fond of providing "safe area" in their add space specs. I ignore them. I know what kind of visual "margins" I want in my designs and I know when I am risking getting too close to the trim. But an amateur designer may think it brilliant to "make a title as big as possible" and actually crowd text almost right up against the trim (in other words, poor design). Then he gets upset when the normal variance in the printing/trimming process causes the text to actually get cut on some of the finished pieces. By providing that rectangle, the printer is telling you "Don't blame us if some of your artwork is too close to the trimmed edge if you place that artwork beyond this rectangle."
    function(){return A.apply(null,[this].concat($A(arguments)))}
    3.1. I made a new document in Illustrator CS5, with the 'complete document' measurements 90mm x 52mm (300DPI, CMYK). Do I need to input bleeding before I push ok?
    3.2. I made a new document in Illustrator CS5, with the 'cut off document' measurements 87mm x 49mm (300DPI, CMYK). Do I need to input bleeding before I push ok?
    In the "idiot proof" template that Vistaprint has provided, they are treating the Artboard size as the bleed, and the red rectangle as the trim. So there is no need for you to include trim or bleed marks in your design.
    Just set up your AI document exactly as the template that Vistaprint provided. Better, actually use their document file and paste your artwork into it on the Layer named "Your Design". When arranging your artwork, leave the (poorly named) "Guides" Layer visible, but locked. Make any art elements (background fills, etc.) that you want to "print to the edge" of the finished card extend all the way to the Artboard edge. Keep all other design elements within the "safe margin" blue rectangle.
    All this is explained, by the way, in the See Accepted File Types link on the Vistaprint site.
    When done, delete the Layer named "Gudies." Deliver the file to the printer. I would not deliver the .ai file; I would deliver a PDF. If you insist on delivering as an .ai file, convert all text to paths (a practice I despise). If you deliver as PDF, simply choose File>Save A Copy... in Illustrator. In the resulting dialog, select Adobe PDF as the file type. In the next dialog, leave the top menu set to Illustrator Defaults, but set the compatibility popup to Acrobat 4 (PDF 1.3). That should be fine.
    JET

  • Using illustrator How do I import a PDF Business Card and Edit

    Hi I have a sheet of business card that was saved as a PDF file. I need to be updated with info extract the logo and keep it separate.  I want to how to import the PDF file then edit all the images text. 
    Can this be done.
    Thanks

    I did this I see a light blue X over the entire image when my cursor is over it.  I'm stuck at this initial stage, cause I can't isolate the logo or text for edit. I'm not sure what to do here and I'm not sure if this was done in illustrator.

  • I modified the first business card in a template. Does anyone know how to get the other cards on the template to look like the first one without doing each individually? please and thanks!

    I modified the first business card in a template. Does anyone know how to get the other cards on the template to look like the first one without doing each individually? please and thanks!

    http://www.freeforum101.com/iworktipsntrick/viewtopic.php?t=182&mforum=iworktips ntrick
    Peter

  • I am attempting to include a pdf business card in my signature. When I do, and go to send an email, the image shrinks. Can you help?

    I am attempting to include a PDF business card in my Signature. When I go to open a new email to send, the PDF shrinks. It also shrinks in the Signature page once I create and leave it. Can anyone assist me?

    PDF might not be the best format for control over the size in html signature file
    http://matt.coneybeare.me/how-to-make-an-html-signature-in-apple-mail-for-maveri cks-os-x-10-dot-9/

  • I have a business card signature and it comes out fuzzy when attached as a signature??

    I received a business card signature from my company and it is perfect but once I attach it as a signature  in an email it is fuzzy?
    Ralph

    First, update iTunes, then connect the phone to the computer and do a restore. This will also get your iOS up to date. Your phone should operate correctly after doing this, if not, you will most likely need to have the phone serviced or replaced.

  • How to layout and print business cards in Avery 8873

    I am new to Pages and can not figure out how to create business cards that register and print in
    an Avery form 8873 Business Card sheet.  This should be so simple.
    Please advise he simple trick.
    Mike

    Have you opened and used the Avery word template for that sheet from Avery's website?
    Tight registration is always a problem with printing to a desktop printer. The paper just doesn't have an accurate paper feed.
    It is always best to design your cards with generous tolerances so nothing vital gets trimmed off, especially when doublesided printing.
    Peter

  • Creating business cards and invoices

    how to print business cards and invoices on my MacBook Pro OS X 10.5.8, purchased August 2009?
    with thanks in advance to respondents . . .

    The process is quite simple with grouping and the application of a little maths and has been posted many times.
    http://discussions.apple.com/message.jspa?messageID=7936462#7936462
    To automate the process of adding the address information of yourself, one other person or a group of people:
    http://discussions.apple.com/message.jspa?messageID=8409766#8409766

  • I'm trying to print an Avery Saved project-(business card) and can't.  I'm told that my Adobe is not

    I'm trying to print an Avery saved project (business card) and can't I was told my Adobe Reader is not configured correctly. My OS is Windows 7.  What do I need to do?
    Chef Roberto

    I have Adobe X and the latest Flash. When I hit the “print” button on my Avery project, a message comes up that a PDF file is being created followed by a Click to Open message.  When I click to open the screen goes grey and stays grey.
    Bob

  • Color issues with Business Cards and Vista Print (Ps & Ai)

    So I use Vista Print for my business cards, quick, easy and affordable.
    I had some graphics that could not be reproduced in Ai very easily so I downloaded the Vista Print .PSD template and worked off of that.
    When the cards came in color was correct but the font was not good. Not very clear and there was digital noise around the edges, so not crisp.
    So I downloaded the Ai template from VP, reproduced the card in Ai and just dropped the logo in on the canvas and redid all the text in Ai.
    When I got these cards in, the font looked much better and crisp, but all my colors were off. My navy blues were not navy-purplish looking. Side by side, it was a big difference.
    I didn't change any color profiles I even made sure the CMYK values from the original photoshop file matched exactly to the Ai file.
    So question is, why would the Ai file print differently if the CMYK color values were the exact same? It makes no sense to me. Was it perhaps how I saved the Ai files? There are so many options when saving it's a bit overwhelming.

    Believe it or not, the Vista Print cards could be color copies.  Try and post a screen shot of each card so we can see the differences.  Not sure how you proofed the card redo out of Illustrator and/or what you used to print the redo card.  The problem with Vista Print is quality control.  You say the card color is accurate in the VP cards.  However, did you proof the card before sending it to VP?  If you did, how?

  • Country and timezone info on business card?

    Lately I saw a thread on ALT texts for the flag image on the business card.
    In addition to that I would like to suggest that the country name and timezone are printed next to the flag. Knowing the timezone of other posters may help to steer expectations about response times.

    Actually in an odd way I like looking up flags, it has a little educational value in it. Without SCN I wouldn't be able to tell you off the top of my head that Iceland is a blue flag with a red cross.
    A quick trick for flags is r-click -> properties, get two letter iso code from end of address (use mouse selection to scroll to end), look up in T005 if necessary.
    However I think the timezone is an excellent suggestion! Perhaps also with an offset to one's own timezone?
    Cheers,
    Mike

Maybe you are looking for