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laminating a spoke card
Any tips or products that work well? Or do y'all just go to Kinko's?
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kinko's, pouch laminated.
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Also remember to leave 1/8" or so around the edges of the card when you trim it out. Otherwise the laminate will peel very quickly...
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Originally Posted by BlindRobert
Any tips or products that work well? Or do y'all just go to Kinko's?
Used to have one spoke card made this way from 1996 in my wheel - though sadly it disappeared this week. |
Originally Posted by fixedpip
Used to have one spoke card made this way from 1996 in my wheel - though sadly it disappeared this week.
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clear packing tape. tape both sides and then trim
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i use packing tape. like someone said, leave room on the edges.
i had a laminated one that recently died largely because of nasty ass road conditions eating away at it. it was pretty light lamination though, so light it was hard to stick in the spokes. |
kinkos pouch lam in the self serve area is the jam... if they're busy, its free
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Originally Posted by MLPROJECT
... if they're busy, its free
but normally i laminate at home. you can buy the laminating sheets for the machines and then just use an iron. it works amazingly well, just practice on some scrap first. remember to use the cardboard they supply to help the heat. after making 2 sets of 40 cards for races, you get really good at it. |
Pouch lamenating sucks.
I'm not sure what kind I got, but whatever it is there was no need for the 1/8inch border around it. No need for the excess border. Ask your local kinkos for their options. |
there has to be some border (certain laminates can get it pretty slim), otherwise there is no seal. i find that pouch holds a lot better to being smashed in between spokes and getting blasted by road-ass every day.
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Say it with me now, kids:
"BLASTED BY ROAD-ASS" :) |
Originally Posted by shants
there has to be some border (certain laminates can get it pretty slim), otherwise there is no seal. i find that pouch holds a lot better to being smashed in between spokes and getting blasted by road-ass every day.
The edge of the paper has a thin layer of plastic on it, but no empty boarder. |
f dat noise, go score some baseball card holders, the bendable kind, then just glue the openning shut. shoo, you probably gots some up in yo attic, or hellz, go slap some kid on yo block and snatch his, if he snitches, hit him with a brick!
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all my spoke cards die. cmwc, monstertrack, etc. the only one that's still holding in is kingofthefv(kingstreets. that's printed on plastic. anyone know how you do that?
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Originally Posted by dustinlikewhat
f dat noise, go score some baseball card holders, the bendable kind, then just glue the openning shut. shoo, you probably gots some up in yo attic, or hellz, go slap some kid on yo block and snatch his, if he snitches, hit him with a brick!
shut up |
Originally Posted by hyperRevue
Pouch lamenating sucks.
I'm not sure what kind I got, but whatever it is there was no need for the 1/8inch border around it. No need for the excess border. Ask your local kinkos for their options. kinkos has either roll laminate (only full serve) or pouch lam (self or full serve). roll lam is thinner, thus less durable. pouch lam is MUCH thicker and much more durable (i.e. ID cards, ID name tags, etc). pouch is a bit more expensive, but a lot more durable. you make the choice. edge sealing is very necessary, especially if your design was printed on an inkjet printer. if it is inkjet printed and you don't edge seal, your paper will get wet on the inside and your design will bleed like a bombsite boy. offset printed designs or laser printers won't have as many problems if you don't edge seal, but it will eventually de-lam as the paper dissolves from moisture. thank you for your time. i am wasted. |
Originally Posted by MLPROJECT
i used to work at kinkos, you don't know what you're talking about.
kinkos has either roll laminate (only full serve) or pouch lam (self or full serve). roll lam is thinner, thus less durable. pouch lam is MUCH thicker and much more durable (i.e. ID cards, ID name tags, etc). pouch is a bit more expensive, but a lot more durable. you make the choice. edge sealing is very necessary, especially if your design was printed on an inkjet printer. if it is inkjet printed and you don't edge seal, your paper will get wet on the inside and your design will bleed like a bombsite boy. offset printed designs or laser printers won't have as many problems if you don't edge seal, but it will eventually de-lam as the paper dissolves from moisture. thank you for your time. i am wasted. Would you like me to send you one of my cards so you can see for yourself. |
Originally Posted by hyperRevue
You worked at Kinkos? My condolences...
Would you like me to send you one of my cards so you can see for yourself. i know exactly hat yo'ure saying - both sides are laminated, but that doesn't keep moisture away from your paper. i actually loved the kinkos job. my location had a lot of my friends working there, so it was a pretty good work environment and i learned a ****load of my production skills there that i carried onto other jobs in prepress, printing and design. |
kinkos - big pouch lam. THICK and stiff, got 4 spoke cards to a sheet with 3/16" borders (1/8" too skinny, 1/4" too thick). $2.70
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Originally Posted by MLPROJECT
shut up
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MLPROJECT is correct, I usta work at kinkos about 8 years ago
pouch lame is tough, you need some border the heat will keep it together even without border, but it will soon split apart--you can run through lam machine again, but it will eventually split again |
Damn, how many of us ex kinkoids are there on here?
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Originally Posted by HereNT
Damn, how many of us ex kinkoids are there on here?
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add me to the ex-kinkoids
color key-op +1 for pouch lam + 1/8 border. |
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