>Thanks to everyone for the quick responses! (Museum-L is like a 1-800 >helpline) >We were trying to avoid "text cards" but it sounds as if dry transfer label= s >are alot of work! Another suggestion I received was to print the text onto >clear adhesive sheets and cut them out and stick them on the panel in the >case. Apparently thet have to be printed on a flatbed laser printer. Simila= r >look to silk screening but with less work than dry transfer. Anybody tried >this method? > You're getting confused, I think. Any laser writer or copier can be fed sheets of clear adhesive acetate. It comes in glossy or matte and is often called applique film. You can find it in office supply stores, arts stores or catalogues. Look for the kind that says it will stand up to the heat of a laser or high speed copier. Print out your text on white paper and photo-copy it onto the acetate, or just hand-feed the acetate to your laser (I don't think this works with ink jet). Then you trim it down to whatever size you need and apply. This is a really simple process. Good luck, ivy Ivy Fleck Strickler Phone 215-895-1637 Drexel University Fax 215-895-4917 Nesbitt College of Design Arts [log in to unmask] Philadelphia, PA 19104 "Never forget that life is like a Fellini movie, and you're getting to see it for free=8A"