Best address labels according to redditors

We found 18 Reddit comments discussing the best address labels. We ranked the 13 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Top Reddit comments about Address Labels:

u/bretstar · 12 pointsr/gaming

Someone obviously printed a CD label and put it on a blank disc, then returned it and kept the real copy. The reason it doesn't show up correctly on Amazon is that it's the Target edition and thus has a different SKU.

u/SteveCooksWhenDrunk · 4 pointsr/spicy

I got them on Amazon

I like them. I can design them myself and play around with it.

u/kheszi · 3 pointsr/printers

The Dymo LabelWriter 450 is a thermal label printer under $50 that might meet your needs. Generic thermal labels are available which make this printer quite inexpensive to operate.

https://www.amazon.com/DYMO-LabelWriter-Thermal-Printer-1752265/dp/B0027JIIKQ/

https://www.amazon.com/Address-Shipping-Barcode-Compatible-LabelWriter/dp/B00VE6L134/

u/zaldria · 2 pointsr/DnD

Hey everybody, I'm a new DM and am going to DM my first in-person session soon (have done Roll-20). I wanted my players to have minis for the monsters, but they can be expensive as we all know. I made my own and wanted to share my project.

I bought this game piece set from Amazon and a pack of 1" x 2 5/8" address labels from the store. I printed out my minis using the label template in Word and they stuck right on to the game pieces. Then I trimmed the excess off the top since the labels are longer than the game pieces.

I like this method so far and feel like it gives me nice, stable minis with the potential to last a long time. I'm not a huge fan of the bases that came with the game piece set, and plan to get different ones once I order more of the cardboard pieces. Now I just have to think of what to do with when I need to make large-sized minis.

Let me know what you think or share your own mini creations!

u/ppphhh · 2 pointsr/simpleliving

I love my label maker, but considering the sub we're in an alternative is some plain sticky labels like these. They take up less space and you already own a pen.

Personally though having a printed label is worth it for me. My handwriting is so bad having it visible in my house makes the place feel untidy.

u/BlueMacaw · 2 pointsr/HelpMeFind

Decorative Labels for Hot Sauce Bottles (5oz Woozy)


Design and print 120 of your own for $10.99.

u/LostMyMilk · 2 pointsr/FulfillmentByAmazon

At about a quarter of a penny per label, print 30 labels at once with any printer, preferably a laserjet printer.
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0016LTINM/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o05_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1

u/mattjstyles · 1 pointr/LegalAdviceUK

0.3p per label https://www.amazon.co.uk/Labels4u-STW064038CO-Self-Adhesive-Addressing-compatible/dp/B00F9W0AG8?ref_=fsclp_pl_dp_2

Plus ink at maybe 4.5p/sheet is a total of less than 1p per label.

If you work in a corner shop you probably get quiet periods in which you could do this :)

Am not actually considering doing this,.but seems plausible to me.

u/Lil_Miss_Scribble · 1 pointr/Entrepreneur

Waaait! This could be easily a great idea but please don't spend £250 on them!!!

My suggestion would be to :-

Make A4 or A5 magnets on your own printer using printable magnetic paper - [Amazon.co.uk - Kodak Magnetic Paper] (http://www.amazon.co.uk/Kodak-Magnetic-210x297-650gsm-320microns/dp/B005CHHDUG/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1376072865&sr=8-3&keywords=A4+magnetic+paper)
I've used it loads of times, it's perfect for fridge magnets. It's thin & you can cut it with scissiors.

Contact a variety of takeaways. It's a great selling point if they're the only pizza /indian/chinese/breakfast place on the magnet.

Try to cover every style of takeaway and try to get restaurants that serve good food & have good reviews.

Instead of 5 restaurants get 20 in a reasonably small 5 mile radius and maybe charge £50 - £75 per advert instead.

All you need from each one, is food style, name, phone number, opening hours, delivery or collection & website. (Lots of takeaways are on Just Eat now any way so no need for a menu)

You can easily type this up on your computer or outsource it on fiverr.com

I highly doubt that takeaways will willingly advertise for other businesses as well, why would they give them to existing customers. They already know the phone number - they need new customers.

I think you'd have to deliver the magnets - either to Uni Halls or hand delivered within the delivery radius of the takeaways.

You could call it something memorable like "What's For Dinner?" and then name them with a specific area and a season. e.g What's For Dinner - Smithfield Edition - Summer 2013.

Then you could renew them every quarter (re-advertising) and expand to new areas too!

For A5 x 100 magnets that would be about £50 for the magnetic paper + printer ink + petrol during delivery + phone call costs + small amount if you wanted to outsource the design. Easily all done under £100.

Good luck!

u/RobertoCruzing · 1 pointr/FulfillmentByAmazon

Using an HP laser printer as well and I use these labels:

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0020X9SZS/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o07_s01?ie=UTF8&psc=1

Good price point, work with a laser printer well and a bit cheaper than Avery 5160.

u/ranchdepressing · 1 pointr/Random_Acts_Of_Amazon

Happy happy joy joy

I'm getting a red velvet vibe from you. I don't know why.

Link but I would like to be surprised. :)

u/scoobyr00 · 1 pointr/FulfillmentByAmazon

I have a DYMO 450 turbo also and I mainly use 30334 size labels. Both Amazon and Inventory Lab will print this size.
***
>I've seen a lot of people basically taking snapshots on every label from a 30sheet which seems kind of wonky.

If you want to use the Dymo with Amazon directly you need to use Amazon's Scan & Label page. Inventory > Manage FBA Shipments, then near the top of the page look for Scan & Label

It prints out labels for one SKU at a time.

Since Chrome changed, it's a little more difficult but you pick the product you need a label for by scanning it or entering your SKU. Then you can either print it or save it. If you print, the chrome print window opens and you need to play with settings to make sure the label fits.

  1. Select the Dymo printer
  2. More Settings > select paper size. 30334 if you are using that size. If you don't see it, you need to print using system dialog
  3. No margins.

    You only need to do this for the first label.



    Inventory Lab is a lot easier. You run the printer setup under account settings to choose your label size. Then you choose if you want the label to print automatically when you list an item, or only when you click the print button.



    Keep in mind, you are suppose to use removable labels when applying directly to the products. That said, Amazon doesn't follow their own rule here and I've learned that the longer removable labels are on, the less removable they are.

    I've used a few label brands.

  • Best quality is the DYMO brand but they are absurdly expensive.
  • For permanent labels, I'm using https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00IC8B5VA right now but I also have https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00JPPLU32 sitting on the shelf. Both seem to work fine.
  • For removable labels I use https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00CBAPJ30
  • I also have some 3.5 x 1.125 labels I rarely use on some specific larger items https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B001AVNLHC

    ***

    As far as printers: I use the Dymo 450 turbo and brother laser https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00LZS5EEI/

    I use the laser printer for shipping labels mostly but sometimes for product labels if I'm sending like 80 of the same thing.

    I spent a lot of time when I started, trying to decide what printer to get. I started with the laser because: 1. I can use it as a regular printer for non-fba stuff, 2. It will print both fnsku and shipping labels, 3. It is really inexpensive.

    I added the DYmo later because: 1. I hated all the wasted labels if I wasn't printing a full sheet, 2. I do RA and matching labels from a sheet with 30+ different products is time-consuming, 3. I often need 1 or 2 labels and it was difficult to do on the laser.

    I haven't looked in awhile but my dream printer would be a thermal transfer printer that is large enough to print shipping labels as well as fnsku. I just can't justify spending $500 on it.
u/e42343 · 1 pointr/Canning

I use mailing labels. I have a word document set up for the label template and I just type in the item/month/year and copy/paste for the number of labels I need. Then simply print them off. Everything is nice, neat, and legible.