Rite Aid offers a variety of cardstock products, including invitations, greeting cards, and gift tags. The Artskills Classic Premium Cardstock is available for purchase in-store only at $9.99. The product comes with 80 sheets of white 100 card stock paper per pack, which won’t turn to mush when wet and will repel water, sweat, grease, mud, and other substances.
Rite Aid provides support, products, pharmacy services, and wellness+ rewards savings opportunities to keep your whole family healthy. The store mails the cards to your recipients for $2.99 for a 5-by-7 postcard. Premium options include 120lb cardstock and foil printing.
Walgreens offers cardstock, printer paper, and construction paper at Dollar Tree. They also provide cardstock, printer paper, and construction paper at Dollar Tree. Each pack includes 50 sheets of 8.5″ x 11″ Classic Premium Cardstock in 8 colors: red, orange, yellow, green, blue, purple, pink, and white.
Premium cards are printed on thick, premium, 100 white cardstock, and envelopes are included with 5x7s. All products can be shipped or picked up. Rite Aid also offers pharmacy cardstock printer paper products delivered to you in as fast as 1 hour with Instacart same-day delivery or curbside pickup.
The Artskills Classic Premium Cardstock is made from acid-free, made in the USA, flat stationary card stock paper, with an 8″ x 10″ 65 lb cover. Photo cards are printed on glossy or matte photo paper, with envelopes included.
In summary, Rite Aid offers a variety of cardstock products, including invitations, greeting cards, and gift tags, with a focus on quality and affordability.
📹 What is the Best Card Stock Paper to Print Your Own Greeting Cards
Not all card stock are created equal! Printing your own greeting cards can be a rewarding part of your creative business journey …
📹 How to Choose Card Stock Weight – Paper Weight of Cardstock Paper
Choosing the right card stock can be confusing and not all brands label things. Here are some tips about which card stock to use …
Suggestion: if you like that premium texture stock’s feel, and don’t want to babysit the printer, make your print file two pages and keep the second page blank. Then alternate a sheet of premium, then a sheet of standard bond, for as many prints as you intend to do. The bond paper will act as a lubricant between those grabby card stock prints.
I’m just discovering your website. Thank you for the recommendations, I will check them out. I had ordered the Red River greeting card stock, so many people gave it glowing reviews. But at 60 lb. It seems awfully thin. I don’t quite understand the hype surrounding it. Maybe it’s the print quality compared to other card stocks(?)
Thank you so much! I love you guys’ enthusiasm. I’m an aspiring entrepreneur with a passion for greeting cards and gifts. If I may ask, have you ever just decided to also have them printed out in mass quantities at a Vistaprint? I assume it’s more profitable? Or are you more focused on the handmade artistic quality of your cards? I apologize in advance if this was answered. Thank you so much!
I got 110lb cardstock (Neenah brand) and honestly it feels thin and flimsy. When I feel a card from a store, it’s far more sturdy. Is there something I’m missing with the paper specs? I don’t want to buy more until I know what I got wrong because this definitely isn’t usable for cards. Also, thanks for making this!
Hey Great article ! Im not familiar with a greeting card, but I wanted to add a note with selling my candles to customers with just some instructions an a thank you to them, I just got the idea to do it on a better paper, more premium than just printer paper, so really just want to know whats the best bang for your buck for a good paper that is kind of thick but not too much for a regular printer, but just makes a nice print.
Hi Cathy, I hope that you are well and that business is good. I just wanted to say that your article ref :- How to Choose the Right Card Stock Paper to Print Your Own Greeting Cards, is incredibly helpful as well as being very intuitive it went into great detail about weight and texture which I found to be incredibly helpful well at least for me. I too need to be very aware of the paper and card stock that I use in my own business as it is absolutely paramount if I want my business to continue being successful not only for the here and now but also for future proofing as I’m sure you’ll agree. Finding out what works for your business is 100 percent paramount. Thank you once again for your truly inspirational articles, bye for now and I look forward to perusal and indeed learning from your upcoming articles in the future.
Hello thank you for the info.. I do foiling art on cardstock currently used a 80lb from hobby lobby..but I want to use a much thicker paper cause I want my customers to have a more study paper that won’t bend easily and remains hard for the long haul.. What do you think about 130 lbs for foiled wall art ?
Iv been searching for weeks for cardstock so if anyone has bought some recently, please let me know where! Everywhere mentioned in the article is out of stock or just so outdated now doesn’t sell anymore. I need 100-110lb linen bright white 8.5/11″ cardstock 🤞 Cannot begin greeting card business without the actual card haha
Hello, I recently starting crafting cards and have tried a few different cardstock brands that I had laying around and then I ordered Neenah Cardstock – Heavyweight, 110 lb/199 gsm Index, 94 Brightness, 8.5″ x 11″, 300 Sheets from Amazon which I thought was a great deal..it cuts nicely and seems to score ok until I fold and complete the score The problem is once it’s scored completely it looks horrible and frayed..can you Please help and recommend a brand I can order from Amazon that will print and score decently. I just want to send out beautiful cards that don’t look tacky. I’m sending back what I bought to get a credit that’s why I’m hoping you can recommend something from Amazon.