Where Imagination Takes Flight
We Do All Three
Design Print Mail
Design Print Mail located in Glendale, California services all your business needs from designing your logos and websites, printing your advertisements, flyers and all the way down to your mailing needs. Design Print Mail has a personal style of service which sets us apart from other design, printing and mailing services. We like to talk on the phone. We want to meet you, we know our clients. So go ahead and give us a call, you’ll wish you did yesterday.

Design
Want to make your brand look good? Here at Design Print Mail, we provide unique designs for logos, business cards, brochures, advertisements, and more.
Let our design experts help you with your business look the best.

We offer printing services to businesses all over California. With the structured partnership, we are able to provide our services efficiently.
To know more about our printing rates, please look into our pricing plan or contact us for information.

All your mailing needs are now sorted. Design Print Mail provides bulk mailing services to businesses. We take care of the mailing process from the pre-sorting stage to the delivery stage.
For more information about our services, feel free to contact us.
How Can We Help?
Reach out to Design Print Mail to get started! If you have questions about our process or services,
send us a message!

From Design to Delivery
All in One Place
While we offer individual design, print, and mail services, we also provide all three services as a package. At Design Print Mail, we take care of your business needs—from creating your logos and websites to printing your flyers and adverts to handling your shipping requirements.
Unlike other design, printing, and mailing businesses, Design Print Mail offers a more personalized level of service. Our professionals will make sure they connect with you in order to develop the finest solution for your needs.
We would love to speak with you and learn more about what you really need. Please feel free to call us; we’d be pleased to assist you.
This Month
10% discount on all the postcard order for March.
The month of Mars
March is the third month of the year and has 31 days. It’s known for its changing weather and is marked by the arrival of spring in the Northern Hemisphere.
Etymology
The name March comes from the Latin word martius mensis, which means “the month of Mars”. Mars was the Roman god of war.
March (Mar.) is the third month of the year in the Gregorian calendar, coming between February and April. It has 31 days. March is named after Mars, the Roman god of war. March always begins on the same day of the week as November, and additionally, February in common years.
This month-long celebration hopes to shed light on women’s roles in influencing nearly every part of society, including politics, music, the arts, and science, to name a few. March is a time to promote gender equality and learn about women’s worldwide challenges.
The little seaside village of Sponkannis lies so quietly upon a protected spot on our Atlantic coast that it makes no more stir in the world than would a pebble which, held between one’s finger and thumb, should be dipped below the surface of a millpond and then dropped. About the post-office and the store–both under the same roof–the greater number of the houses cluster, as if they had come for their week’s groceries, or were waiting for the mail, while toward the west the dwellings become fewer and fewer, until at last the village blends into a long stretch of sandy coast and scrubby pine-woods. Eastward the village ends abruptly at the foot of a windswept bluff, on which no one cares to build.
Among the last houses in the western end of the village stood two neat, substantial dwellings, one belonging to Captain Eli Bunker, and the other to Captain Cephas Dyer. These householders were two very respectable retired mariners, the first a widower about fifty, and the other a bachelor of perhaps the same age, a few years more or less making but little difference in this region of weather-beaten youth and seasoned age.
Each of these good captains lived alone, and each took entire charge of his own domestic affairs, not because he was poor, but because it pleased him to do so. When Captain Eli retired from the sea he was the owner of a good vessel, which he sold at a fair profit; and Captain Cephas had made money in many a voyage before he built his house in Sponkannis and settled there.
When Captain Eli’s wife was living she was his household manager. But Captain Cephas had never had a woman in his house, except during the first few months of his occupancy, when certain female neighbors came in occasionally to attend to little matters of cleaning which, according to popular notions, properly belong to the sphere of woman.
But Captain Cephas soon put an end to this sort of thing. He did not like a woman’s ways, especially her ways of attending to domestic affairs. He liked to live in sailor fashion, and to keep house in sailor fashion. In his establishment everything was shipshape, and everything which could be stowed away was stowed away, and, if possible, in a bunker. The floors were holystoned nearly every day, and the whole house was repainted about twice a year, a little at a time, when the weather was suitable for this marine recreation. Things not in frequent use were lashed securely to the walls, or perhaps put out of the way by being hauled up to the ceiling by means of blocks and tackle. His cooking was done sailor fashion, like everything else, and he never failed to have plum-duff on Sunday. His well was near his house, and every morning he dropped into it a lead and line, and noted down the depth of water. Three times a day he entered in a little note-book the state of the weather, the height of the mercury in barometer and thermometer, the direction of the wind, and special weather points when necessary.
Captain Eli managed his domestic affairs in an entirely different way. He kept house woman fashion–not, however, in the manner of an ordinary woman, but after the manner of his late wife, Miranda Bunker, now dead some seven years. Like his friend, Captain Cephas, he had had the assistance of his female neighbors during the earlier days of his widowerhood. But he soon found that these women did not do things as Miranda used to do them, and, although he frequently suggested that they should endeavor to imitate the methods of his late consort, they did not even try to do things as she used to do them, preferring their own ways. Therefore it was that Captain Eli determined to keep house by himself, and to do it, as nearly as his nature would allow, as Miranda used to do it. He swept his doors and he shook his door-mats; he washed his paint with soap and hot water; he dusted his furniture with a soft cloth, which he afterwards stuck behind a chest of drawers. He made his bed very neatly, turning down the sheet at the top, and setting the pillow upon edge, smoothing it carefully after he had done so. His cooking was based on the methods of the late Miranda. He had never been able to make bread rise properly, but he had always liked ship- biscuit, and he now greatly preferred them to the risen bread made by his neighbors. And as to coffee and the plainer articles of food with which he furnished his table, even Miranda herself would not have objected to them had she been alive and very hungry. to be continued….