Home › Forums › Photography Q&A › Calenders
- This topic has 4 replies, 3 voices, and was last updated 8 years, 9 months ago by
James Staddon.
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July 21, 2016 at 9:02 pm #18164
Austin Vinar
ParticipantDoes anyone have any tips on designing and printing calenders? Anything from a designer to where to get them printed.
July 27, 2016 at 11:39 am #18273Frazer Family
ParticipantI printed mine through Docucopies.com last year. Compared to a lot of other places, their price was the best I found… if you’re willing to wait for a sale. I went with them primarily because they were one of the few places that would allow me to design my own calendar and not oblige me to use their template, but they do also have template options if you’re not a designer.
James also offers a Custom Artist’s Calendar. I’m sure he’d be happy to inform you about printing through Lenspiration.
July 27, 2016 at 12:59 pm #18274Austin Vinar
ParticipantDo you remember what you paid for them?
July 27, 2016 at 7:17 pm #18278Frazer Family
ParticipantHmm… There was a 30% off sale and I bought 25 copies for $210 CAD. In USD at that time (Sept. 2015), I think that came out to about $160, so $6.40/calendar. They were 26-page, spiral-bound calendars with bleeds, 80# glossy cover, and 28/70# laser white smooth inside paper. Without bleeds is less expensive (but you get a white fringe on each page), and staple-bound is also slightly cheaper. A lighter weight paper can cut the price, too. If I had done staple-bound, without bleeds, and a light weight paper, I could possibly have bought 25 copies for as little as $3.69/calendar. (The more copies you do, the less it costs per copy.) Docucopies appears to have sales pretty frequently, but you have watch for them. When I was trying to get my calendar printed, it seemed as though they had 30% off every Wednesday. I once saw a sale of 50% off, but I hadn’t even started creating my calendar at that point, so I couldn’t take advantage of it. 🙁
Oh, and there’s the shipping on top of that price. At the time I had my calendars printed, there was free shipping to continental USA on orders over $100. I had mine shipped to some American friends who held it until I could get down for a visit. If you want a hard copy proof, there is additional fee for that as well.
If you can’t get a sale at Docucopies; if you’re only printing in small quantities, i.e. ~55 copies or less; and if what you want is a “James Staddon quality” calendar (and you’re happy to go with a template design), you’re best off ordering through Lenspiration. (Just had to advertise a little to support Lenspiration! 🙂 )
I designed my calendar myself, so I didn’t have to pay for that service. As for tips on designing a calendar, I can’t really say a lot. I just looked at other calendars (I have a collection of a couple dozen or so), got ideas, and tried it. Last year I did the entire project on Corel Photo Paint 8. I virtually didn’t know the program when I started and just figured it out as I went along. (And spent a lot of time waiting for the computer to load my huge files!) This year I’m using Scribus, Inkscape, and probably GIMP since our version of Corel is so old it doesn’t have the functionalities I want. Again, I’m learning as I go. It’s a lot of fun! 🙂
July 28, 2016 at 8:25 am #18279James Staddon
KeymasterThanks for the plug, @frazer-family. Using my template is the easiest way to do it, but for those who want to take the time to create their own design, I can print custom designs like I do for @buddingphotographer (https://plus.google.com/s/ezra%20morley%20calendar).
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