

You can see a close up view of the artwork below, first how it comes on the 8 1/2″ x 11″ sheets with 2 recipe cards to a sheet, and below that, how it comes if you’re printing directly on 4″ x 6″ cards.Why not add a note of grace to your life by using seasonal printable recipe cards? But the random downloaded recipe files that are jumbled in a mess in our documents are today’s version of my mom’s torn scraps of paper. Maybe we do a search each time or perhaps we even save them to our computers.

These days many of us find our recipes on line.

I choose ‘photo quality’ and select the ‘matte photo paper’ setting on my printer. In either case, I suggest using heavyweight card stock and setting your printer on the highest quality print setting. If you prefer to print on paper you already have, I’ve also provided an option to print on 8 1/2″ x 11″ paper and cut out the cards with a scissor or paper cutter. For those who want the look of a perfectly cut finished card, I recommend buying 4″ x 6″ blank cards and printing directly on them. The artwork was designed for a 4″ x 6″ card, although if you’re good with printer settings, you can adjust for other sizes. Use them in your own recipe box or share them with a loved one. It’s for printable recipe cards tailored to your most loved fall and Thanksgiving recipes. My talents lean more toward design than cooking, so I’m sharing today a new FREE printable for the fall season. I’m typically not the one who shares my recipes, but my recipe cards… that’s another story. In an effort to break the tradition of recipes that were more clues than directions, I vowed to use proper and neatly filled-out recipe cards. Clearly written from memory each time, they never had the exact same ingredients or measurements.īecause, of course, that’s how she got them from her own mother. When she passed and we cleaned out her house, I found multiple scraps of paper with recipes for the same items. Always written in pencil and in danger of imminent disintegration, I couldn’t understand why she didn’t use recipe cards. Yet when I asked her for those recipes, they came on half torn scraps of paper, impossible to read and with missing quantities and details. Who doesn’t have a recipe they love to share with the world?Įven my mom, who frankly hated to cook, had her special holiday recipes that made her seem like Julia Child.
