These Labels have a variety of uses. Teachers and schools use them in the classroom. Great for organizing books by reading levels or organizing CD's by genre like rock, jazz and classical. Labels are great for calling attention to documents, manila file folders, inventory, calendars, maps, mailings, crafts and more! You can even color code food in your freezer! These small labels are great for labeling electronic curcuits, keys with locks and can even be used to color code a computer keyboard for learning to type. They can also be written on with pencil, pen or marker. Labels stick to all surfaces, even clothing. Adhesive sticks to all surfaces including glass, plastic, paper, metal, ceramics and more! Labels are 8.5" x 11" sheet with 550 .25" labels per sheet. 6600 labels in all. Made in the USA.
M**B
My granddaughter came to my rescue.
For weeks I was looking for a way to identify action cameras and accessories. Let me explain. About a year ago I was forced into a power wheelchair. I tried for months to avoid one but after a series of falls I gave in. I just didn’t want to become inactive and needed something to keep me busy. I have a strong photographic background and started looking for a project I might be able to do from the chair. During some research I came across some small cameras known as action cameras. These are the cameras you see attached to helmets, skateboards and bikes which allows the user to record in both still and video. The research led me to purchase a couple of the more expensive cameras as they offered everything I was looking for. I attend a program at the local rehabilitation hospital where they teach new chair owners how to get around, maneuver inside, outside use and safety. Believe me, you just don’t jump in a new chair and get going. There is a learning curve, a big learning curve. On the first appointment I attached the new cameras to the chair. One at wheel level and one at shoulder height and I thought the results were great. I brought my Ultra Book computer along and during lunch I inserted the memory card in the computer and began looking at the morning results. Within minutes I had people, both Chair users and others including some of the staff. We went a bit over our lunch schedule but made it back to the classroom only a few minutes late. At the end of the session we have a group meeting where we can ask questions and listen to others who are new to a chair. It’s quite informative and interesting. The questions that first day was all about the cameras. Was it expensive, are they difficult to use and can any one learn how to use them. I think I did a pretty good job explaining and in all honesty was looking forward to our next session. At the next session and before the class began I was approached by a couple of unknown staff members who saw the first of my videos and heard the question/answer session. They wanted to know if it would be possible to start a class using cameras like mine as there was quite a lot of interest in my camera gear. They needed to know pricing and what other things that would be needed. Because I have quite a few friends in the photo industry including manufacturers and working photographers, I was able to donate 10 cameras to the hospital. Now you have to understand that there are action cameras and then there are action cameras. Serious photographers use some of the best cameras available because of the rigorous manufacturers inspection and making sure all accessories will work the same for every camera made. The cameras I was able to be donated were far from the best. They are good enough for learning most every aspect of recording and that’s where it ends. The biggest problem with the inexpensive cameras is quality control. There must be at least 10 Chinese manufacturers making the cameras with at least twice as many brand names. This means that the accessories aren’t compatible from one manufacturer to another. This is where the stickers come into play. In order to make sure each camera, accessories and batteries as well as the memory cards that needed to be formatted, it’s important to keep each manufacturer separate and using their accessories that come with the cameras. I thought maybe a label maker would do the trick but the labels were two big. The next idea was a engraving tool but that two wasn’t feasible. It was my granddaughter who came to the rescue and suggested these labels. The labels are perfect for the size and the way they stick. The colors are bright which makes it much easier to identify each accessory label. At the end of class the equipment is all matched to its identical camera. We have had six lessons with four to go and not one problem has arisen. I have been in contact with a major brand named company who is considering giving each graduate of the class a much better camera than what they were taught on.So you don’t think I’m a snob about the better cameras I too use the cheapest cameras I can find for those rainy days as well as snow, sleet and even some under water use. I’m keeping busy with the classes which is totally a voluntary position. If anyone would like more information about this review please get ahold of me.This review was written without any financial considerations. Neither a free product nor a discount was received. Full Amazon retail was paid.
E**M
Not the best for printing
I bought the white sticker pack. These 0.25" stickers are exactly the size I wanted to use in my planner. They did leave a bit to be desired, though.The toner rubs off in places just spooling through my laser printer, so they might work better with inkjet.The template you get a link to download is pretty wonky and does not fit well. It's good I'm a fair hand at tweaking stuff in MS Word, bc this table itself needs adjustments. On my test print, the upperleftmost sticker was aligned but from there down, everything began shifting. I followed the directions to adjust the margins, but that just made the problem easier to observe. I think the cells between each sticker are just too wide. I might DIY a template in Excel for greater adjustment.All in all, they are still what I need. Worst case scenario, I might just do color gradients on them with alcohol markers instead of trying to print tiny clip art that needs to align.
M**E
Great for color-coding just about anything
I bought these in frustration over never knowing which "wall wart" (plug) had enough amperage to charge any particular device. I wanted to be done with plugging in a tablet or phone only to have it uncharged overnight because the plug only handled 0.5amps.I've ended up using these for lots of things that I needed to "code" in some visual way just to make life easier -- folders, storage boxes, even charging cords.
G**H
Handy dandy little dots! They are SMALL!
We use these to keep track of our vape cartridge varieties. Since we keep a dozen or so different strains around at any given time, it's easy to lose track of what is what. So we use these dots, and 2 letters written on each, to label the strain of each cartridge. I also affix matching dots to the original packaging and hold onto that, in case I can't remember what a given dot means.The dots are SMALL, they do measure 1/4" as they're supposed to, but I didn't realize just how tiny that was until I got them! They still work great for me, but be aware that dot is the size of the round flat end of a pencil eraser. I use an extra fine point sharpie and can barely cram 2 letters on 1 dot.They're just handy for organizing stuff. My only real complaint is, the package contains more than 10x as many as I needed. It will literally last me the rest of my life at the rate I use them! lol.
M**Y
A lot of circles
I had 7 hummingbird feeders that had faded in the sun. I could spray paint them, sure, but wasn't confident that the paint wouldn't impart something toxic to the birds after soaking in warm sugar water day after day, so I wanted to cover the holes, keeping paint from getting on the inside of the feeder. I thought about using a hole punch to cut circles from painter's tape, but I needed 70 of them, and that was too much effort for me, so I went looking for tiny adhesive circles. These are, in fact, tiny adhesive circles, and worked perfectly for my project. My feeders are once again vivid red, and no paint on the inside, or the area immediately around the feeder ports. I think there are 3300 in the package, so at 10 ports per feeder, I can repaint my feeders 330 times. 7 down, 323 to go!
R**H
Perfect as ukulele markers
Great size as finger markers for musical instruments. Used on ukuleles as learning tools and the sizing is perfect.
R**B
Bought These To Identify What NOT to Throw Away
OK, I'm 62 and trying to get my affairs in some semblance of order should something happen, ya never know. I have a lot of stuff I"m trying to go through and get rid of, so my children won't have to. That said, I still have a lot and they won't really know what to keep or have valued, or just take to the thrift store. I have things that cost very little, and things that are pricey and have increased in value over the years --paintings, pottery, etc. I have jewelry that is real, and jewelry that is fake. I bought this little stickers to put on the bottom of things to simply alert them "Whoa, not so fast, this may be worth something!" Things like first edition signed books, expensive pottery, or pottery that their step dad made that may be sentimental--stuff like that. Hopefully they won't throw away something that they may want to keep, or at least sell.
C**X
Colle bien.
Utiles pour tout!
A**É
Buen producto
Son bolitas negras, pegan bien, son muchas, son matte, buen producto.
A**A
Etiquetas.
No tiene circunferencia.Excelente adesivo.