More than just being used to communicate your contact information, business cards are great tools to grow your brand. They give potential clients a glimpse into what you can offer and set you apart from others. And, it's great to have them on hand to pass around during networking events or when chatting with prospective customers about the products and services you have to offer. Whether you're looking for something formal and traditional for your business or instead, something minimal and simple, you can easily create standout business cards with the Adobe Express online editor.

Whatever vision you have in mind, Adobe Express lets you bring it to life with free business card templates and endless drag and drop customization options at your side. Use Adobe Express to edit every element of your business card exactly the way you want it. Choose from thousands of stunning fonts, curated color palettes, images, videos, icons, graphics, and so much more to add to your project. Save your new business card template design to print or share to any digital destination. Go back and make edits anytime as needed.


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The way I have done this in the past is to duplicate the business card page in the PDF until you have 10 identical pages. You will need to have Acrobat Pro, NOT Reader to do this. I hold the control key (cmd on Mac) while dragging the page in the pages panel. Releasing the mouse button (with the control key still pressed) creates a duplicate page. Once I have ten pages, I call up the Print dialog, select Multiple, and set the custom settings as shown below.

A simpler way is with Avery templates. I was a bit skeptical, but I had bought their perforated business cards, so after trying a few things i went to their web site. They have a template, exactly what InDesign should be providing, to lay out the cards on one page. It was easy enough to print two sided from there. You can even get them printed professionally from Avery which I'm probably going to do on heavier card when I'm settled on my design.

When doing professional print, look at the prices. There are companies specialized in this type of printing and they provide good prices and quality. The most expensive piece of your bc is currently design, at least when using a bc for a one man buisness.

Show your UC Santa Barbara pride and make your university affiliation clear in all your presentations. Microsoft Powerpoint templates are available in a standard (4:3) print-friendly format, as well as a widescreen (16:9) format that's great for screen-only presentations. The type is pre-set to Century Gothic, campus colors are built into the theme, and there are various slide layout options to choose from.

Business card templates are available via MOO, a leading provider of quality business stationery. A number of layouts are available to meet a range of information needs, and cards are available in a variety of UC Santa Barbara colors for added impact.

This easy-to-use tool prompts you to confirm and/or edit the contact information you'd like to feature in your emails and simultaneously displays a branded and stylized signature that you can copy and paste into the appropriate settings of your email application. Set up instructions are provided for Gmail, Outlook, and Apple Mail. UCSBNetID is required.

Designing a research poster for your department or for a conference? Look no further. We've done our research and designed a poster template that will help you communicate your ideas clearly, concisely, and on brand.

The guidelines featured on this website represent a subset of the official UC Santa Barbara Identity Guidelines. Download the full set of guidelines for access to additional resources, best practice application examples, and more.

The designs below are available to order from our recommended vendors. But, if you prefer to get your business cards printed with an outside vendor, you can download and edit these templates yourself.

In theory, any of those (plus others you haven't mentioned, like the open source alternatives Gimp and Inkscape) let you design a business card. If you are particularly proficient with one of them, you might want to consider going for that one to save time. While the three Adobe products have some similarities of use, they all require some learning time. If you have the time, I'd definitely recommend you pick one (spoilers: It's Illustrator).

InDesign's specific purpose is laying out printed materials. That's its strength, you can see it as a way of joining Photoshop and Illustrator elements into a new 'thing'. However, where it shines is with multiple pages (tools like text wrap are extremely powerful). The good thing is: It packages fonts and images all in one file, but the file size will generally also tend to be bigger, so in your case, it might be a bit of an overkill. Yes, you could use InDesign, but you will be missing drawing features.

Photoshop is best for creating and editing photos or raster images. Its main 'power' comes with its image manipulation possibilities. It is not made for printing. Think of it more as a way to edit pictures you want to then add into printing materials. So, you could use Photoshop, but then you'd have issues preparing the files for the printer.

Illustrator is used for illustrations, logos, and scalable graphics in general. It's also widely used in printing, but not for multipage documents like InDesign, as it has no support for master pages and it doesn't let you automate page numbers. Illustrator's drawing capabilities are closer to Photoshop, but 'better' for non-raster illustrations. You can do anything you can in Photoshop - illustration-wise - and you will be able to get everything ready for production in no time.

So, in short, I'd say most cards get designed in Illustrator. As Confused mentions, all printers will be happy with Illustrator files, there are plenty of examples you can follow and the result will just be, overall, better.

Lots of great answers but I'm surprised none of them have talked about batch production of business cards with data merge templates. Even if you're designing for a 2-person startup, with any luck a year or two down the line they'll be coming back to you for business cards for their 8 newly hired employees, then coming back a few years later with a much bigger budget as they open their Asia office...

Okay, maybe not at that scale... but happy recurring clients coming back for bigger variants on work they liked (delighted by your super-fast turnaround times) can really help keep the wolf from the door.

Variable text (names, job titles, email addresses) in a spreadsheet in the client's favourite spreadsheet package (usually Excel), which they update. This way, the person closest to that content is in charge of that content, it can be updated in the most efficient way by the person best placed to do the updating, and you can't be held liable for any typos in email addresses.

Don't be guided by personal preference like 'effects', 'not fun' and 'clunky interface'. They are not relevant. As a designer you should pick the right tool for the job. This is not only about business cards. But applies to all pre-press productions.

Adobes big three have overlapping tool space. But all three have their own specialty. If your design requires images (pixels) use Ps if you need illustrations (vectors) use Ai. Layout (combining pixels, vectors, and text) use Id. Make them work together and get the best of each tool.

Yes, they have overlap. Setting text can be done in all three. The thing that goes wrong with text (or any vector) in Ps is that they end up as pixels. The printer needs to rasterize those pixels to a screen (a pattern of dots). This process renders the edges fuzzy. You should have used vectors in Ai or Id. Because in those programs vectors are not converted to pixels but stay sharp lines between points.

Note: There is a difference between designing and producing files for the printer. When you design, anything goes. I wouldn't use software but pen and paper. Use whatever you like. When producing the design for a printer, then the contents of the design dictates the software to use.

Of course, this only makes sense since Illustrator CS4 and the addition of the multiple artboards feature. Prior to CS4, I used Indesign (Or QuarkXpress) due to the overwhelming headache of needing one Illustrator file for each name on a card. That's simply not an issue anymore with multiple artboards (and symbols).

The only real important thing is that the card looks as wanted and it can be reproduced correctly. With that in mind, you could use "Jimmy's Playtime Paint Application for Kids" as long as it can save/export/output a proper PDF for reproduction. What you use is not nearly as important as how you use it.

I'm actually surprised to see so much love for Illustrator in response to this question, but all the business cards I've done have been very sober corporate designs, so I guess the drawing tools weren't necessary. Our shop used InDesign exclusively for business cards, and wouldn't have dreamed of using IL or PS.

if you need to make same business cards for lot of people (changing the name, the phone, and so on), InDesign would be a better choice : you can do templating, work on multiple pages in one document. So it can be a good choice in that case.

I do the design in Illustrator or Photoshop in the dimensions of the business card (i.e. 2" x 3.5" at 300dpi CMYK). Then I import that file into InDesign for layout. If the business card needs to be laid out 10 per page, this is as easy as copy/paste/arrange. 152ee80cbc

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