Family Style
For the Working Mom: Amazing Fabric Business Cards
If you’re like me, you can see only so many boring white business cards before they all start to blend together. That’s why I was beyond excited to come across these fabric business cards Jessica Levitt, of the Juicy Bits blog, created.
Sure, they may not work for those uber conservative business environments, but for any type of job that’s creative–or even just for use as a handy calling card–the fabric business card is a genius idea. According to her Web site, Levitt decided to make the business cards to get word out about her blog–and made tons of cute and unique cards using scraps of fabric.
If someone handed me this business card, I would definitely be impressed–and I’d absolutely hold on to it! (And probably show it to everyone I know–how’s that for publicity?)
If you’re looking for a creative, cute and unique way to get the word about yourself, your work, or anything else–try Levitt’s approach. Click through for more photos of her creations. 
Go Back To Family Style
1 Comment
[...] you want to be really innovative, do what this crafter did – make fabric business cards! These are a perfect way to showcase your dazzling stitching [...]
Business Cards for Crafters | Professor Business Cards commented on Sep 14 10 at 6:04 pmAdd your take:
Note: Babble is a supportive, diverse community. We encourage a range of opinions,
but any unduly hostile comments will be removed.
Comments are delayed up to 15 minutes







Victoria Smith
Melanie Blodgett
Natalie Holbrook
Nicole Balch
Gabrielle Blair
Jaime Morrison Curtis
Rachel Faucett
Jordan Ferney
Chelsea Fuss
Michelle Horton
Liz Stanley
Rachelle Wilde
Jan
The Walt Disney Company supports Babble as a platform dedicated to honest, engaged, informed, intelligent and open conversation about parenting. However, the opinions expressed on this site are those of individual parents/writers and do not reflect the views of Disney. In addition, content provided on this site is for entertainment or informational purposes only and should not be construed as medical advice, diagnosis, treatment, or safety advice.

1