Create, Print Envelopes, Labels On Your Mac

Posted on February 2nd, 2007 by Jason

Last week, someone asked me for my fax number. I thought, “How quaint.” Seriously, there are some day-to-day functions that are not , web site related.

So it goes with mailing labels, , addresses. Old fashioned? Yes. For some. For others, it’s a factory job with Factory.

Most of us at Mac360 have our favorite Mac applications and, as the Mac platform grows and writers improve their , we have favorite developers, too.

falls into that category, and we’ve reviewed nearly every Mac application they publish. ”gets it” and understands what a Mac application should look like and feel like.

If you’ve been a Mac user for any length of time, you understand about ”feel.” In most cases, you can open a new Mac app, run through the menus, and get it working without devoting a week to PDF study.

BeLilght’s Factory works that way, too. While the Help screens are, well, helpful, it’s doubtful you’ll need to spend much time there.

If faxes and are not the only way you communicate with businesses and people, then having a built-in Factory in your Mac will help.

Simply put, Factory lets you create and print , address and shipping labels from your Mac.

Quickly, easily, accurately. No fuss, no mess, no bother.

Getting started with any new Mac app is a sweet challenge. Expectations are high. Factory doesn’t disappoint. The 3 Step Assistant makes it easy to dispense with Help screens.

Select what you want. Label, Envelope, Postcard. Each tab provides different options. For labels, it’s all the standard and many non-standard label sizes; Avery, Decadry, APLI, A-One, Dymo, Seiko, MACO, Pimaco, and many others.

Select a label, and click Next. That’s Step One.

Step Two lets you define the label, center or flush left, or whatever, add color, and so on. Step Three is what you’d expect. The end. Almost.

Mac OS X’s AddressBook is integrated, so you can simply pull addresses you already have. Modify the Sender information, select One Recipient, or Multiple Recipients.

Click Finish and you’re ready to print.

Options? You want options? Sure, how many? You can customize the label size, content, or start over and design what you want from scratch.

More options? Import a mailing list from Excel, vCards, FileMaker, and pretty much any tab-delimited text file. If you’re into sorting, Factory gives you all the basic options from contact fields; Name, Zip Code, State, whatever.

Also handy is the fact that Factory is not US Centric. USPS, Canada Post, Royal , even European and Japanese envelope and postcard sizes are available.

If you’re into customization, Factory has built-in designs (dozens), built-in clipart (hundreds), and custom masks. It’s also Mac OS X Tiger savvy, and can apply Tiger’s Core Image filters to your imported images.

Comparing features to AddressBook is actually fun, since Factory has more than AddressBook or anything else I’ve used.

I prefer Mac developers who recognize the difference between home, home , and . Factory is $39.95 for the full on edition that does everything. Not everyone needs a merge function for mass mailings and gazillions of addresses.

The Factory Home Edition is half that price, but does the same basic , labels, mailings for those of us with more subtle requirements.

What’s great about ’s applications is the attention to detail, ease-of-use, yet power and flexibility. Factory’s only visible flaw is the now tired brushed aluminum look and the pure “gray is out of your way” design. A little color wouldn’t hurt.

Outside of that, if you need mailing labels, Factory makes the process pleasant, not painful, with many more features than available in AddressBook, yet it integrates well letting you manage your names and address information as you always have.

Yes, we use and PDFs these days. Labels and are not dead. What do you use to create and manage mailing labels and ? Share your experience in the Comments section below.

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