Title says it all. Looking to create a cash and a tourney set out of 2k+ faux clays. I hear Gear is the best, but with something cheap like faux clays I’d prefer to keep it budget and print at home. Any help is appreciated.
You're up early? I at least have an excuse.
Is this a euphemism?Up late. Watching Japanese Wrestling.
Just thinking through a backup plan. My buddy has a small cnc router so hopefully that makes it easier.I assume you're not planning on milling due to the title "thinnest"?
Noted. Punch it is. Appreciate the heads up.I did use stock onlinelabels.com for the print at home, they have all kinds of materials and sizes. However, here is my cautionary tale about home printing.
https://www.pokerchipforum.com/thre...d-perils-of-cheap-chipping.29479/#post-546125
Basically home printers, no matter how well you calibrate are subject to at least 1/8" of possible shifts. Fine for most home printing applications, but troublesome for this purpose. A 12% shift in a 1" inlay is a big deal unless you have a very tolerant design. (As in plenty of whitespace on the outside.)
My design couldn't tolerate that, so I ended up doing full sheet labels and hand punching which was a ton of handwork.
I am happy with the final product for ABS, but it was way more work than I bargained for.
Just thinking through a backup plan. My buddy has a small cnc router so hopefully that makes it easier
So now that punching 2k+ of these is on my plate - is there a go to for entire blank sheets?
Also Avery 6450So now that punching 2k+ of these is on my plate - is there a go to for entire blank sheets?
Buy a few of them because they do go full after a while and there’s really no good way to sharpen them. Plus you want a sharp cut or the label will look like crap.
Your best bet is talking to Gear. His cheapest labels are thin and about 20 bucks per rack. Way better than embarking on an R&D project and potentially having issues with adhesion or color fading/transfer.
Yeah you’re probably right. Maybe I can convince myself to spend the coin despite these being faux clays.