label making
- To: i*@egroups.com
- Subject: label making
- From: a*@jump.net
- Date: Fri, 28 Apr 2000 18:37:03 -0500 (CDT)
> This is not for the everyday garden use and is a bit tedious to cut etc.
> but they look as good as the expensive Brother label maker and last as
> long. Just one more option.
The cheapest Brother is down to $60 or so. And the labels last
forever. They use a thermal (burnin) process (as does a laser)
that an ink jet uses. Unless you have access to a laser printer
I'd suggest the Brother; some of my four year old labels on
wood -- the wood started to rot, but the label is intact, leaving
the label held together by the label, or the ends of the label
streaming off a tiny remnant of wood..... and the zinc (Eon)
labels with Brother labels are indestructible.
If I put horticultural label sheets in the shared laser printer
at work, it'd have to be way after hours or people would cuss
when their reports got printed pre-shreddable :-)
I just bought ANOTHER Brother, which can do different fonts
and graphics when hooked up to your PC, and you can bet I
will be designing a little iris icon :-)
--Amy
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