![]() ![]() I know this wasn't as easy as doing it in Word, but if you don't have Word and don't want to buy extra software, this is how to do it with a standard installation of Mac OS 10.5. After all that, I deleted the extra 29 copies of the contact. That way, I can print out these return address labels any time. In order to save myself the trouble of having to do all this over again, I selected Save to PDF from the PDF drop-down menu at the bottom left corner. Then I clicked on the Layout tab and selected Avery standard and 8160. ![]() In the Address Book area of the print dialog, I selected "Mailing Labels" from the Style pull-down menu. I made sure to check the box "apply to all." I then selected these 30 contact cards (all of the same contact), and selected "File / Print" from the menu bar. ![]() I then imported the 29 vCards back into Address Book, but I chose "Keep Both" when the Duplicates warning asked me what I wanted to do. See where to find Avery templates built into Microsoft Word so you can create and save your designs for Avery labels, cards, dividers and more using Microso. I selected the resulting vCard on my desktop, clicked the right mouse button (CTRL+mouse-click if you have a one-button mouse) to get the context menu, and selected "Duplicate." I duplicated this one vCard 28 times. What I did was select the contact I wanted to use to print return address labels - the same address printed on a page of 30 Avery labels (8160) - and drag it to the desktop. I figured out a way to do this using Address Book without resorting to Word or Print Shop.
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