Half Sheet Sticker Template: Fill & Download for Free

GET FORM

Download the form

How to Edit and sign Half Sheet Sticker Template Online

Read the following instructions to use CocoDoc to start editing and drawing up your Half Sheet Sticker Template:

  • First of all, look for the “Get Form” button and press it.
  • Wait until Half Sheet Sticker Template is shown.
  • Customize your document by using the toolbar on the top.
  • Download your customized form and share it as you needed.
Get Form

Download the form

An Easy Editing Tool for Modifying Half Sheet Sticker Template on Your Way

Open Your Half Sheet Sticker Template with a Single Click

Get Form

Download the form

How to Edit Your PDF Half Sheet Sticker Template Online

Editing your form online is quite effortless. You don't have to download any software via your computer or phone to use this feature. CocoDoc offers an easy tool to edit your document directly through any web browser you use. The entire interface is well-organized.

Follow the step-by-step guide below to eidt your PDF files online:

  • Find CocoDoc official website on your laptop where you have your file.
  • Seek the ‘Edit PDF Online’ icon and press it.
  • Then you will visit this product page. Just drag and drop the template, or append the file through the ‘Choose File’ option.
  • Once the document is uploaded, you can edit it using the toolbar as you needed.
  • When the modification is done, tap the ‘Download’ option to save the file.

How to Edit Half Sheet Sticker Template on Windows

Windows is the most widespread operating system. However, Windows does not contain any default application that can directly edit document. In this case, you can download CocoDoc's desktop software for Windows, which can help you to work on documents productively.

All you have to do is follow the guidelines below:

  • Get CocoDoc software from your Windows Store.
  • Open the software and then attach your PDF document.
  • You can also attach the PDF file from OneDrive.
  • After that, edit the document as you needed by using the diverse tools on the top.
  • Once done, you can now save the customized PDF to your device. You can also check more details about editing PDF documents.

How to Edit Half Sheet Sticker Template on Mac

macOS comes with a default feature - Preview, to open PDF files. Although Mac users can view PDF files and even mark text on it, it does not support editing. Through CocoDoc, you can edit your document on Mac directly.

Follow the effortless guidelines below to start editing:

  • To get started, install CocoDoc desktop app on your Mac computer.
  • Then, attach your PDF file through the app.
  • You can attach the document from any cloud storage, such as Dropbox, Google Drive, or OneDrive.
  • Edit, fill and sign your paper by utilizing this tool developed by CocoDoc.
  • Lastly, download the document to save it on your device.

How to Edit PDF Half Sheet Sticker Template via G Suite

G Suite is a widespread Google's suite of intelligent apps, which is designed to make your work faster and increase collaboration within teams. Integrating CocoDoc's PDF document editor with G Suite can help to accomplish work effectively.

Here are the guidelines to do it:

  • Open Google WorkPlace Marketplace on your laptop.
  • Seek for CocoDoc PDF Editor and get the add-on.
  • Attach the document that you want to edit and find CocoDoc PDF Editor by selecting "Open with" in Drive.
  • Edit and sign your paper using the toolbar.
  • Save the customized PDF file on your computer.

PDF Editor FAQ

How can I make a unique business card?

How can a business card be designed without being thrown away?Creativity can be achieved in terms of design style, font, material, shape, etc., so that your business card becomes different, so that it is not lost, left behind, and stayed behind.Below, Fotor Fotor - Free Image Editor & Graphic Design provides several ways to help you create an impressive, innovative and creative business card.Unique cuttingAbove is a business card designed with cropping. Compared to the previous right-angled border, a simple rectangle with a few cuts makes the business card look a lot more creative.Change shapeA simple shape change can make your business card stand out from many business cards. This square business card is a good example.Add special elementsUse creative thinking to showcase your brand identity while not taking up a lot of space. Adding a hand-stitched logo on the edge of the business card is like a clothing price tag on the clothes, which not only saves space but also adds fun to your business card.Humor and practicalityThe business card above is a business card for a divorce lawyer, which combines humor and practicality. It not only relieves the tension but also saves the number of printed business cards because sometimes you only need to give others half a sheet.Sticking a sticker may be funUncovering the sticker can make a transition to a new interface, and this fun and interactive way can be impressive.All the cards described above can be achieved with the help of tons of templates from Fotor.Impressive business cards are just a few clicks away with Fotor.

Where is the best place to advertise garage sales?

Craigslist and Marketplace. Once you put the info on these two sites, you will get just about everyone who hits garage sales every weekend. And, since they use data from these sites, you will also appear on the numerous “Yard Sale Finder” apps that are out. Take good photos! Several wide shots with some close ups of featured/in demand items. In focus, please, and post them right side up (I have seen them blurry and upside down or sideways so many times!). Include a comprehensive list of items. You don’t need to list each item individually - general categories will do - but cover everything. If you have clothes, list the genders and sizes or age ranges available. I have seen sales that said “Too much to list!” and, when I get there, they have 2 tables. There wasn’t too much, they were just too lazy.Also, do your research. Before having a sale of your own, go to several. This will give you ideas about setting up and organizing, what not to do and, most importantly, pricing. The regulars will know if you are overpriced for your area and won’t buy. Go to sales and take notes for price ranges for the types of item you have. And, please, price everything! Get a pack of return address labels (80 per sheet). You can use a template for the label brand found in most word processing programs (Word, etc). Print the price on each label twice (left & right) and repeat the same price on each label on a sheet. Print and cut the label in half between the two printed prices and between the label rows. You will then have 160 mini labels that you can easily peel & stick on your items, Depending on your sale, print out a sheet (or more) for a bunch of prices (we did an estate sale and had 10, 25, 50, & 75 cent stickers along with $1, $1.50, $2, $3, $4, & $5 stickers. We also had some blanks so we could write in prices on more expensive items. Some items (Books, DVDs, CDs, most clothes, linens, etc…) don’t have to be tagged individually. You can just print a list and post up several copies (Soft cover books $.50, Hard cover books $1) or (Towels $2, Hand Towels $1, Washcloths $.50) Be sure to make a master price list of these items for your cashier station, just cut and paste your signs and shrink the font size down to get them all on one page.For passers-by, I would also put up signs nearby along primary driving routes. Bright colors with large letters - Keep it simple! Most people know what these signs are for so don’t use up your space with the words “Yard Sale.” The address needs to be big so people can read it from their moving cars. Thick arrows on separate papers to point the right way will help, too. Your signs should be larger than a sheet of paper to be readable. If you use paper, glue or tape it to cardboard if needed so they won’t fold over. Some plastic wrap is good if it is rainy. Include the dates (not just “Sat” please) and times. At your sale get 3 or 4 bright and shiny helium balloons that can be seen from down the street so people can tell right where you are.Also, get change! Probably $100 will do. At least a 2 rolls each of nickels, dimes & quarters and the rest in mostly Ones with some Fives. If it is gonna be hot, buy a couple cases of bottles water to sell from a cooler for $1 each. Maybe some snacks or other goodies to sell so people have something to munch. Have bags available! Lots of bags. Maybe go to a local convenience or grocery store and get some boxes or “flats” (those cardboard trays that beverages often come in) The flats are also useful for keeping your small sale items organized. It is also a good idea to ask around your neighborhood and see if you can get 3 or 4 other houses to have a sale at the same time. Since there will be multiple sales close together, you all will get more people to stop by. I love such “neighborhood” sales because I can easily and quickly get to several with minimal travel and hassle. They are usually first on my list. One development near me has a yearly neighborhood sale. Literally over 100 houses participate. I can park and go to 10 sales before needing to move my car. Awesome!And, check local events. If there is a big event happening far from your house that weekend, you may want to reschedule. If it is nearby, you might pick up business from people going to the event, though. And, you don’t want to try to compete with large, annual sales like the one mentioned above. Everyone will go to it and not yours.Wow. This got really long, really fast! Hope it helps. Good luck.

What are the biggest lessons you have learned in the corporate world?

So let me start at the beginning. When I was 5, I wanted to be a ballerina. It wasn’t that I particularly liked ballet. It’s just I really liked that the ballet teacher gave us gold star stickers. And part of me always stayed the same – I liked getting gold. I liked trying to be the best and chasing things that I thought were shiny. So I went to the top girls’ high school in the State, and in year 12, I applied for a traineeship at one of the Big 4 firms in Tax. And I got a spot. I was ecstatic! I remember jumping up and down with happiness. This was the biggest professional services firm in the whole world!So at 18 I started my professional working life. After working there for two years full time while studying part time, a couple of the trainees decided to transfer into law. So I thought – why not? I will too. It wasn’t really something I had planned out, but a sort of go with the flow thing. The same thing happened in penultimate year when it was time to apply for clerkships – being honest – before that process I hadn’t even heard of most of the law firms. But then you find out – which firms are in the top tier and which firms are in the top tier of the top tier – and because it felt like that is what everyone was aiming for, I decided I wanted it too.I remember my lecturer in the legal ethics course telling us “I’ll tell you that working at a big law firm is horrible. But none of you will believe me. You’ll all be set on going there. And one day when you get there, you’ll look back and realise I was right.” Ba! Like I was going to listen to her! Through the endless application forms, the countless interviews and cocktail events – I got a spot at a top of the Top Tier law firms! I was even more excited about this than when I had gotten into the Big 4 firm!I had an amazing time during clerkship and met a brilliant group of people! I paralegaled during my final year of uni and started there as a grad in February 2010. I did rotations in Property, Litigation and Banking – then settled in the Banking team. The thing I loved the most about working there, was the people – they are bright and kind and funny. They’re good to talk to and easy to relate to. But there were also things I found difficult. As I am sure many of you would know, the hours in a law firm can be very long.I remember one of my fellow grads saying “I got to go home early yesterday - I left at 10pm.” That phrase really struck me. Because I realised that normal people would think we were crazy.I don’t do very well without sleep. Unsurprisingly – I get sleepy. But it was more than that. I felt a pervasive tiredness. My body would be overwhelmed with it. I remember one time being in the middle of a due diligence – urggg, the words “due diligence” still make me shudder! We’d been working days that rolled into mornings and my friend who was also working on the matter called and asked “How are you going? Are you ok?” I remember telling him “I’m just crying. I don’t even feel particularly sad. I just get like this when I am tired.” And then we took a break by going for a walk while I was still sniffling while walking along beside him.The funny thing is – it didn’t even seem that odd at the time. It had become our normal. When I would hear someone crying in a toilet cubicle I would just shrug my shoulders and think “It happens.” If I went home at 3am and other people worked all nighters I knew that was just me being a weakling.There was an interesting article I read about an Australian nurse, Bronnie Ware, who spent several years working in palliative care, caring for patients in the last 12 weeks of their lives. She kept a record of their epiphanies close to death and their regrets. The top two regrets were:1. I wish I'd had the courage to live a life true to myself, not the life others expected of me.2. I wish I hadn't worked so hard.I had been at the law firm 4 and a half years when I realised corporate law wasn’t for me. I realised that I had been following a template of what I thought “success” looked like without actually considering what mattered to me. I regretted the times such as when I missed my baby sister’s 17th birthday dinner because I was stuck at work. I think sometimes change seems scary. It seems easier to just keep going with things as they are. But we forget that change can be for the better.The reality is I had never found purpose in corporate law work. When people would ask me what I did for a living I felt sadness when I had to tell them I drafted loan documents. But realising corporate law wasn’t for me, I felt completely lost. Being at a top tier law firm is what I had been aiming for. It was like I had been trying so hard to win a race, then realised I didn’t even want the prize. Or like reaching the top of the mountain, but then discovering I couldn’t breathe up there. But then where was I supposed to go? I didn’t have a clue.For a year, I ended up as an Editor at legal publishing firm, as part of the team that looked after a legal encyclopaedia. It’s a funny thing leaving corporate law. On my first day of my new job, I was sitting at my desk at 5:15pm and my manager said “Evelyn, do I have to have a talking to you. You should go home at 5pm.” That was VERY different to what I had been used to. During the same week when I asked my manager if he wanted to review the email I was going to send out (which is what I had been used to doing) he looked at me like I was a complete weirdo.Leaving corporate law, I was visibly happier. I love being able to make plans after work and NEVER having to cancel them. I love never working on weekends. I love not having to fill in 6-minute increment time sheets. And - I also love not ageing prematurely!The down side would be that I took a 40 per cent pay cut. Initially that psychologically got to me. I felt like a poor person. I felt like I had fallen out of the golden circle. I’d compare myself to others I would have started with and know they were on double what I was earning. But over time that faded. I realised that money is something you can accumulate, but time is something that once lost, you can never get back.Recently, I was at a boardroom lunch and was talking to one of the attendees who is a partner at a law firm. And I asked him – “So you’ve reached partner level now. Do you ever reach the point where you feel like you make enough money?” He laughed and said “Pff! No! I’m drowning in debt!” It made me realised how shackling it was to be tied to always wanting to earn more. I grew to love the freedom that not chasing money provided. It gave me time to figure out what I really wanted to do.And that is how I ended up in policy work. I love policy work. I experienced this sensation that I had never felt before of actually finding work a highlight of my week. Of not feeling indifference or dread, but actively feeling happy about work. If you think about it, especially if you are working long hours, you spend the majority of your conscious hours at work. So it seems pretty important to like what you do.I am not saying every day is rainbows and butterflies – there are hard times and challenging times, but on the whole policy work is something that I find genuinely stimulating and engaging. You are trying to change things to make them better. You aren’t limited to being specialised in a discrete area but get to be involved in whatever random issues pop up. Being in a policy role you have access to the leading minds in the industry and you gather information to try and come up with solutions. You get to meet with Minsters, the Treasurer and Government departments to try to help shape the future. To me policy work feels like it has a purpose and I really love that.My path to get there wasn’t a straight one. To get my foot in the door of policy work, I was 28 with a decade’s worth of work experience, but applying for what was effectively a graduate’s role. But for the first time I was doing something not because it was what I thought everyone else viewed as successful, but because it’s what I genuinely wanted to do.I am really glad I left corporate law. I know it’s something I will never regret. A quote that resonates with me is “It is better to be at the bottom of the right ladder, than the top of the wrong one.” And the thing is, once you are on that new ladder you will always have scope to climb again, but this time doing something that you actually enjoy. So I encourage you to go and find your ladder.

View Our Customer Reviews

This software has significantly helped in the midst of a year where face to face visitation wasn't possible. I would definitely recommend it.

Justin Miller