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Halloween.com offers a lot of great Halloween Resources as well as Halloween Free Printables section. We highly recommend checking out the site.

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Kimberly Hargis

The only way to tell you who Kimberly Printable is and how she got to be where is she today is to take you through a journey from the earliest days of the Internet, which was only available to people who had a modem card in their computer so that they could “dial up” and connect to the web. So let’s get started…The only way to tell you who Kimberly Printable is and how she got to be where is she today is to take you through a journey from the earliest days of the Internet, which was only available to people who had a modem card in their computer so that they could “dial up” and connect to the web. So let’s get started…

 Back when Microsoft was in the Windows 3.1 version (and to establish how long ago that was, we use Windows 7 today), my family got our first computer and I got a freelance job typing up information for a local business that wanted to move their hardcopy to computer-based documents. There were no such things as optical-reader scanners back then and anything moved from hardcopy printouts to computer documents had to be done by hand.

When Windows 95 was launched, I thought working at home would be “easy.” After all, I had a computer and I could log onto the Internet. Like a vast number of other people who had the same idea, I bought into several work at home schemes, all of which sounded “too good to be true.” And, of course, they all were too good to be true. Ultimately, I realized that working at home really meant starting my own business.

I jumped on board the home business train, got one of those first freebie web sites (the kind that had the impossibly long web address), and began to create the first of my many web sites. After an unknown number of trials and errors, plowing through the early transitions of not only Microsoft, but I also had to learn about and adapt to the basic workings of the Internet and the web. About this same time, domain names were becoming affordable. Realizing that the domain name that I chose would be the foundation of my entire at-home business, I settled on “Moms Break” (with the goal of using at-home Moms as my target market).

Moms Break was originally a site that listed other free offers that at-home Moms would find interesting and usable. At the time, this was a great idea because, in those early days of the Internet, most people didn’t know how to find these kinds of offers on their own. At that time, searching the web wasn’t as simple as typing in a couple of relevant words or terms and letting Google do its thing. Yahoo and Excite were the only search engines, and you had to understand how to search for what you wanted to find (does anyone remember Boolean searches?).

After the birth of Google and the rapid changes in other search engines that make them what they are today, an at-home business based on hunting up offers for Moms became obsolete. This was a huge blow to my business plans. Anyone could now jump on “The Google” and find what they needed. I had to dream up a new approach to my Moms Break website…one that would still attract at-home moms.

While I was cleaning out a closet, I discovered all of the supplies I’d used during a stint of preschool teaching. While I looked at those supplies, my thoughts drifted to a free fax-cover fax form that I had just downloaded from the web. That was it! I could turn my experience as a preschool teacher into creating free to print paper-based products that Moms could use for all sorts of things. These types of free documents became known online (which was another term change, instead of saying “being on the Internet”) as “free printables.”

In time I expanded my horizons and added more free printable web sites that would be attractive to other target groups of people. I also diversified the types of free printables that are offered on my web sites, morphing my at-home business as new technologies became available and easily accessible to anyone who has a computer.

Well, that’s my story…and I hope you’ve enjoyed reading about my personal journey. Now, I hope you’ll enjoy visiting my free printable web sites!

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Friday, September 23, 2011

postheadericon Blog Direct Open 54 Haunted House Raffle Ticket Free Template

54 Haunted House Raffle Ticket Free Template: Personalizing, Printing, and Cutting

This set of free printable Haunted House raffle tickets is 9 pages with 6 raffle tickets per page, offering a total of 54 numbered raffle tickets. These raffle tickets can be personalized with your own text before printing. See example image below for where to add your own text.

What you need to know:

You only need to personalize the six tickets on page 1. Type your text in the first ticket, and then repeat this text in the remaining five tickets on page 1. Once you have your desired text in each of the six tickets on the first page, that same text will appear on all the tickets for the remaining pages 2 to 9.  

To personalize your tickets, type your text directly into the personalization box in Adobe Reader. ~ or ~ You can first type your text in a document using Open Office free software, Microsoft Word or Works, or other rich text word processing software. This allows you to set the font type, size, and color of your text in the word processing software. When you have your desired text, in the font, font size, and text color desired, you can “copy and paste” the text from the word processing document into the personalization area of the raffle tickets on page 1 in Adobe Reader. After you have pasted in your text, you may need to adjust the spacing. This lets you control the look of your raffle tickets so that you can add your own personal flair! 

To print and then cut apart the tickets, use the following guidelines. Be sure that you have personalized all six tickets on the first page. Then print as the tickets, as is. When all nine pages are printed, keep them in the same stack as they were printed, with the page with ticket numbers 46, 37, 28, 19, 10, and 1 on top. Cut out all nine pages at once using a paper-cutter (if available) or cut by hand with scissors. When the nine pages of tickets are cut apart, you should have six stacks, with tickets numbered 1-9, 10-18. 19-27, 28-36, 37-45, and 46-54. You can staple each of the six stacks to make a 9-ticket “booklet” of tickets or you can make one stack of tickets 1-54. 

NOTE: IF your printer settings have been adjusted to default “Print Last Page First” then you will need to select the “Reverse pages” printing option in Adobe Reader before you print the tickets.
 

Example image showing where to personalize:





 Example image of page 1 of this free raffle ticket template:




Open this free set of 54 Haunted House Raffle Tickets!

Happy Halloween
Kimberly



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