Sir I am 13 years old and I make decent card games in my opinion out of notecards and now thanks to you I just have to save some money and I can make my cards look and feel really professional!! THANK YOU SO MUCH
I looked all over the internet for some kind of instruction like this. I am doing a card game for a school project and this video is going to be the reason that I get an A+:)
absolutely love the way that you format your videos. the material lists and reminders make it easier to follow what you've got going on. keep doing what you are doing. much appreciated!!!
I´m getting ready for my first round of play testing for a card game I´m developing, not wanting to spend too much money at this stage of the process, and this video was just perfect for what I was looking for. Thanks.
Thank you! A few years ago some of my friends gave me a limited edition of The Witcher 3's (a popular videogame) second expansion, which included 2 decks from its ingame cardgame minigame. The other 2 decks accessible are on the limited edition of the first expansion, which are almost impossible to find, aren't sold or shipped to my counrty, and if they exist they are absurdly expensive (180USD or higher). Also there was a 5th deck that was never made in any physical format. I decided to use the layouts and symbols of my authentic 2 decks and the pictures from the minigame to make those 3 remaining decks, and after a long time working on it i found a guy who could make the cards, but he suddenly stopped responding me. I even borrowed him 2 cards as a reference for the calibration of his printers colours and he never gave them back. It makes me really happy to see that i can make the cards on my own, and that you even shared the exact products and how to buy them. For me it's critical to have good quality cards, because the ones i will make will be played right next to the originals and I want them to look just as good. I'm really grateful, Martin. Again, thank you. Ps: Just in case, i'm not trying to counterfeit the game or material from the limited edition. Doing the cards myself will be absurdly expensive to sell them (considering the amount of time invested in making the digital versions, printing, laminating and cutting). Also the game has an online and free upgraded version, which would also make this unprofitable. I just want to have fun with my friends with the wonderful gift they gave me from a franchise that i really love.
@@abbasmogul7039 Uf, tough question. I was originally team Triss, but since I recently read the books I'm planning to play the game and go for Yennefer and see how it goes. As for the printable gwent decks, you can check these links to find the files of all the decks for printing. www.reddit.com/r/witcher/comments/3anq4q/complete_printable_gwent_decks_in_full_300_ppi_40/ www.reddit.com/r/gwent/comments/4rabye/another_guide_for_printing_gwent_cards_complete/ Regarding my own files... since I don´t have new files for Nilfgaard and Northern Realms I haven't shared them online. Also there are still errors I'm trying to polish. I hope the ones in the link are useful to you :)
This is really helpful! I’m 13 years old and just made my first card game! I’m hoping the supplies I ordered will arrive soon. Can’t wait to try out this method!
this is so helpful!! i’m making card games for family and friends as holiday presents this year and i couldn’t find a good tutorial that fits the supplies i have, i’m only 14 so i have to use what my family already has. thank you so much, this is such a good tutorial! :)
I was surprised so many people in the comments never thought of doing this method. I thought of doing this and fortunately created my first deck 17 years ago when i was in Junior High. We have all the supplies and materials available in my mom's office at home back then until now. After cutting the cards and make round edges, i would make another run of laminating each cards one last time.
This is the "how to video" I was looking for on card stock lamination! Super Awesome Job Martin! Thank you so much for making a simple, easy, very well done video for us who are interested in laminating print and play games👍👍.
Thanks Martin, been looking for a great corner cutter and your endorsement sells it after seeing all your quality work on the solo FB forums. Keep up the great work and I look forward to some other tutorials to get your quality :-D
After searching all over, this is the best and most informative video I've found. Ordered all of these supplies and I'm excited to get started! Thanks for making this.
@@PnPHideaway Hi Martin. Javi0usly here again (using my other account). Just wanted to let you know that I plugged this video in our most recent upload. Thanks again for putting this tutorial together! It was super helpful. Here's the video if you're interested: ruclips.net/video/d_bYGuTinl8/видео.html
Love this, I just picked up Fallout Wasteland Warfare and its RPG expansion book and it is a mini-card heavy system. Modephius provides PDFs of all of the cards made so far and I want to print common item cards like food and meds so I can give them to the players without worrying about them losing the originals.
I wanted to say thank you for the info. I bought the exact same kit and was able to laminate my own fan-made player's boards for the game Th Grizzled Armistice. I used all your tips and it ended all very well.
So you can cut right in the middle of the laminating pouch, and the laminated plastic will not come off the paper? It basically glues the laminating sheet to the paper? I thought you had to have a plastic-on-plastic border (glued onto itself) for everything to stay together (if that makes any sense)
Yup, makes sense. I too used to think that a laminate border was needed. Turns out that the inside of the laminating pouch is coated with adhesive that activates and sticks to the paper surface when exposed to the heat from the laminator rollers. So you can cut right to the card edge, no worries there. :)
That's what wrong settings and dirt-cheap laminators do. If you laminate on higher temp than is recommended for used thickness of laminating pouches, with quality equipment and/or you run it through laminator multiple times, the lamino will fuse into the paper, and stay there even if you remove the edges. The only downside to removing plastic-on-plastic edges is that paper becomes exposed, on the edge, and card becomes slightly susceptible to water damage.
I started doing this technique, but used a cricut to cut out the cards. Really saves a lot of time. However ive noticed even with some heavy cardstock, if you dont use black for the back of the card, say some lighter color, they are still a little transparent if you get some strong light against them. I havent found any paper that is opaque like true playing cards. Also what i dont like about cardstock is you dont get colors that pop they are very dull...wish there was a good matte paper that isnt see through to print on.
Hello Martin, it looks like you have a very nice printer that delivers very good quality prints with both sides. Can you share which model of printer you are using? Do you recommend something better or is that what you're using enough?
I have an important question: did you use a high precision printer? Because I'm a bit concerned with the alignment of the rear face with the front face. I'm planning the printing layout of my custom Clow Cards and I'm not sure if the digital precision will be maintained when it comes to actual print. Thanks.
Take a look on Amazon for this listing "Oregon Lamination Hot Laminating Pouches Letter (Pack of 100) 3 Mil 9 x 11-1/2-inch Matte/Matte". A bit expensive but are Matte finish.
Yes Matte lamination pouches are available, bit more expensive, but the results are amazing! Less glare, and feel soft. My friends couldn't even tell that the playermat for Rune Age (best interactive deckbuilder ever!)I downloaded from BGG and then laminated with matte was made by me! They thought it came in the box! :) Regards, Salman
Amazon seems to have discontinued that laminator in the UK and all the others don't seem to have those thickness settings, merely cold or hot settings.
How do you line up the front and back so you can cut it out exactly? I can't seem to line them up quite right so the backs look great, but the fronts are almost always off and it looks bad.
Do You think It is somehow possible to laminate plywood (2-3mm thick) things with paper graphics on it? Or maybe I should stick to pouring epoxy resin on it? Those laminators won't be able to accept such thick material... I think.
Hi Martin, Thanks for great tutorial. Can you tell me what youe printer is? I ask cause 110 lb is pretty thick paper so not all printers can handle them. Looking forward to receive an answer. Best regards
Hi, Martin! I am developing my own desk game, so I was looking long and hard for a method to create profesionally looking cards, tokens, etc. for fast development and really enjoyable playtesting. Regarding making cards I independently came to very similar method as you have. Except I use "double sided matt photo paper" (which is almost the same as regular cardstock), I print it with 6-ink EPSON tank system photo printer, then I feed it through a slightly better laminator with 4 rollers, so at first I laminate only once (with matt laminating pouches), then I cut the cards via print'n'cut feature on my silhouette cameo 4, and then I run my individual cards through laminator again to better fuse lamino to the paper, and to cure the edges which might be a little corrupted after cutting. I have not yet found any significant difference in quality after running cards though laminator the second time, but also nothing yet disproved that logic of mine, so I still rather follow through. Also if you ever need to make everlasting game plan tiles, I found the best method is to print the shape (even intricate ones) on 3D printer (I usually use white rPLA), then sand the top surface, clean it with IPA, and cover it with printable vinyl sticker (also printed then precisely cut on desktop cutter like Silhouette). Theese look really professional, last a lifetime, and overall are way better to play with than that pressed paper boards that comes with commercial games 😏 Of course, that whole equipment bundle would cost you just north of $1000 USD, but considering that laminator and inkjet printer you already have, you'll just need a desktop cutter ($199 USD for Silhouette portrait 3), and similarly priced 3D printer if you choose to make plastic tiles.
Really nice video. Do you actually play with these cards? Since I have three questions about this method: 1. Aren't the cards a little too slippery? 2. Does cuttiing through plastic make the blade of the cutter dull really fast? My third question: when playing often, do the edges of the cards split apart time a little bit (i.e. the edges of paper and laminating material)? Thanks for answering, Michael.
Hi Michael, thanks for your comment and questions! Here are my responses: 1. Nope, I find the cards have just the right amount of slide vs. friction. 2. Not really. And replacement blades are cheap. I also use a kitchen knife sharpener to sharpen my current blades if need be. :) 3. With the method I show here in this video, using these materials, I have not experienced any splitting or delamination. I have experienced delamination with some other types of paper, or when i get fance and try to construct a card from a separate front and back, glue together, then laminate. But you should be fine as long as you stick to the method and materials i show in this video. Also, rounding the card corners helps to prevent delamination at the corners/edges. Thanks for watching! :)
Thank You for the video. I don't know if to laugh or to weep for the 20 $ laminator. Some Years ago (well, MANY Years ago) I bought a GBC laminator, A3. It has seen little work, but the funny part is that its price was around 500 € .......
I just brought a laminator that has both hot and cold system incase i need it for my dad's documents. Im wondering what program and how you make it all the same size because i always been using just word documents and just drag to enlarged but idk how to make them the same size to made cards. I want to made cards of my favorite idol, also my mum has her own idol and her birthday is coming i want to do this as present to have photo cards since our printer is not a photo printer. I also brought a cutter because i remember this video
Hi Owen, thanks for your question! I know some folks who laminate regular printer paper rather than card stock. In my experience, it feels too thin. However, you might have a better result if you pair printer paper with 5mil thermal laminating pouches rather than the 3mil pouches you see me using in this video. If you do try the 5mil pouches, please let us know how it turns out. :)
Hi there! I used to make PnP cards with a card stock core, with plain paper front and back, spray glued, with protective lacquer applied. I still use that technique for some builds, but nowadays I prefer to laminate my cards. :)
@@PnPHideaway That's very curious. I used a converter, which gives about 1.5 gsm per pound. Looking closer, I see that that is for paper and there is a different conversion for "cover" stock, which would be consistent with the value you've found. When I take a look at the Walmart site, I find 110 lb cardstock paper at about the price you mention. I don't see any cover stock, but there are many pages of search results that I haven't gone through comprehensively. So now I'm really confused. How sure are you of the conversion? For comparison, the pack of index cards I have here would be at 170 gsm.
@@mijaba71 Don't know what to tell you. Every chart and guide I find online converts 110 pound card stock to around 270-310 gsm. There's a graphical chart at this link that I find illustrates the equivalents very well. www.cardstock-warehouse.com/pages/cardstock-paper-basis-weight-chart
Nice video! That's the same laminator that we use. I also always run my PNP stuff through the laminator twice, I think it just helps the final product, and I'm glad I'm not alone in that. :D I'll need to check out that paper trimmer. I bought one a while ago, but it doesn't have a guide wire and I found my cuts to end up skewed. I still prefer and exacto knife, even to the rotary cutter because I found mine kept getting dull easily - I had to constantly press very hard. I do want to upgrade my corner cutter, and that's the one I was eyeing, so it was cool to see that in action. Also, thanks for showing off this re-theme. I know what I'm doing after vacation. :D
Hello Martin, thanks for the tutorial i really liked it but i have one big question, do you know how can i get rid off the gloss? or make them less glossy
Nobu Hi Nobu! The gloss is part of using this laminating technique. I have heard that there are matte finish laminating sheets available, but they are significantly more expensive than normal laminating sheets. I accept the gloss as part of the trade-off for the convenience of using this method to make PnP cards. :)
Hey man, great videos. Can you please make a video on boxes? Like telescoping boxes and tuck boxes. And also, would cardboard paper do the trick for this? Thanks
Long Thanks for your comment! Sadly, making game boxes is not a skill that I currently possess. I would suggest you like for “Dining Table PnP”, that’s Jake Staines’ channel, he has tutorial videos on how to make game boxes (and many other PnP-related items).
@@long3974 Sounds good! If the cards end up feeling too thin, you can try using 5mil laminating pouches to increase the card thickness while using thinner paper.
Hi Martin, First of all thanks for all the tutorial. I too prefer the print and laminate method as you shown here. However, what I repeatedly failed to do is to perfectly align the double sided printing. I am curious of how did you manage to do that? Thanks again for your help and hopefully you see this question and willing to share your method. Cheers!
Thanks! In this video I used Neenah bright white 65 lb. card stock. More recently I have been using Koala brand 48 lb. matte photo paper as I find that it makes for brighter colors on my cards. :)
I’ve long since gotten used to the gloss. I think any spray would just make the cards feel, shuffle and play worse. There are matte laminating pouches you can buy, but they are significantly more expense, and anecdotally people have told me that they tend to not adhere as well.
Good sir you just saved me on a big upcoming project I have. Do you happen to know the best program to make my own cards? It's for a college course and wanting to make it professional
I made this video almost four years ago. Since then I’ve switched to printing to 65 lb card stock, as eventually I found 110 lb card stock to be too thick. Plus it damaged my old HP Officejet Pro 8015 printer. Now I have an HP Officejet Pro 9018 printer. I don’t ever print to card stock thicker than 65 lb.
One thing I do is, after I cut all my laminated cards out and trim the corners if applicable, run them through the laminating machine a THIRD time (like you, I do two passes before cutting them out). I'm obsessed at getting a nicely glued lamination on the cards, as well.
I was thinking the same thing. Maybe I'm superstitious, but I have the feeling that another pass after the cutting does also "smoothen" the cut edges a bit. Idk or maybe this only happens when cutting with scissors: The edges feel a bit sharp and uneven...
I haven't tried it either. I just ordered these matte laminating pouches from Walmart instead www.walmart.com/ip/Universal-Laminating-Pouches-3-mil-9-x-11-5-Matte-Clear-100-Box-UNV84622/15074811?comm-msg-vehicle=EMAIL&comm-msg-id=9adb2418-a6ac-4939-b067-9610ef67f99c Hopefully they'll work :)
In a previous tutorial you mentioned that an enamel spray on the card stock helps the colors 'pop'. Do you still recommend this step prior to laminating? If it does make a visual difference, what is a good amount of time of waiting for the spray to dry before the lamination step?
@@PnPHideaway Can I get the 180 gsm glossy photo paper instead ? i have the 100 micron thickness laminating pouches. Hopefully these look fine. you thought ?
Brandon Musler Thanks for your kind words! :) Nowadays I have created a number of PnP cards and pages from scratch. I generally make a new template in Photoshop or Pixelmator for each project. I size individual cards at poker size: 2.5 inches width by 3.5 inches height, 300 dpi. I size PnP pages at US Letter, 8.5 inches width by 11 inches height. I use rulers and guides to create a grid to make sure that my individual cards are properly aligned on the page. Finally I place 1 pixel horizontal and vertical cut lines. When I’m done I export such page to PDF. Repeat the process for each page until the PnP file is completed.
Sir I am 13 years old and I make decent card games in my opinion out of notecards and now thanks to you I just have to save some money and I can make my cards look and feel really professional!! THANK YOU SO MUCH
The trumpet jedi You are most welcome! :)
Keep creating! I wish I had made some of the ideas I had when I was your age. Who knows it could lead to a career or a side hobby job for you.
You spoke (wrote) exactly as Tony Stark speaks in Iron man movies
The trumpet jedi use an iron to laminate them
good luck!!
I looked all over the internet for some kind of instruction like this. I am doing a card game for a school project and this video is going to be the reason that I get an A+:)
Glad to hear that my tutorial video is helpful to you. :)
absolutely love the way that you format your videos. the material lists and reminders make it easier to follow what you've got going on. keep doing what you are doing. much appreciated!!!
I´m getting ready for my first round of play testing for a card game I´m developing, not wanting to spend too much money at this stage of the process, and this video was just perfect for what I was looking for. Thanks.
Thank you! A few years ago some of my friends gave me a limited edition of The Witcher 3's (a popular videogame) second expansion, which included 2 decks from its ingame cardgame minigame. The other 2 decks accessible are on the limited edition of the first expansion, which are almost impossible to find, aren't sold or shipped to my counrty, and if they exist they are absurdly expensive (180USD or higher). Also there was a 5th deck that was never made in any physical format.
I decided to use the layouts and symbols of my authentic 2 decks and the pictures from the minigame to make those 3 remaining decks, and after a long time working on it i found a guy who could make the cards, but he suddenly stopped responding me. I even borrowed him 2 cards as a reference for the calibration of his printers colours and he never gave them back.
It makes me really happy to see that i can make the cards on my own, and that you even shared the exact products and how to buy them.
For me it's critical to have good quality cards, because the ones i will make will be played right next to the originals and I want them to look just as good.
I'm really grateful, Martin. Again, thank you.
Ps: Just in case, i'm not trying to counterfeit the game or material from the limited edition. Doing the cards myself will be absurdly expensive to sell them (considering the amount of time invested in making the digital versions, printing, laminating and cutting). Also the game has an online and free upgraded version, which would also make this unprofitable. I just want to have fun with my friends with the wonderful gift they gave me from a franchise that i really love.
Gwent is the exact same reason I'm trying to print cards myself.
You team yen or triss ?
@@abbasmogul7039
Uf, tough question. I was originally team Triss, but since I recently read the books I'm planning to play the game and go for Yennefer and see how it goes.
As for the printable gwent decks, you can check these links to find the files of all the decks for printing.
www.reddit.com/r/witcher/comments/3anq4q/complete_printable_gwent_decks_in_full_300_ppi_40/
www.reddit.com/r/gwent/comments/4rabye/another_guide_for_printing_gwent_cards_complete/
Regarding my own files... since I don´t have new files for Nilfgaard and Northern Realms I haven't shared them online. Also there are still errors I'm trying to polish.
I hope the ones in the link are useful to you :)
@@LostieMJ thanks a lot
I already started making them
I'm with triss btw
Yes! I have created game cards with my laminator. it's a great way to bond with them and make them last longer. great walkthrough!
Awesome! Thank you!
That's how best tutorials in youtube are. This the simple tutorial I found that helped me to create my own card deck. Thank you so much. 👌👍
David Deutsch Jones Thanks, glad you found my tutorial useful! :)
This is really helpful! I’m 13 years old and just made my first card game! I’m hoping the supplies I ordered will arrive soon. Can’t wait to try out this method!
Thanks for your kind words! Very glad that you found my tutorials helpful. :)
This is the greatest tutorial about card lamination on youtube. Thank you!
Thank you! :)
Thank you for the great tips on what equipment to buy and what techniques worked best for you, such as laminating each sheet twice.
obiwan4242 You’re welcome, thanks for watching, and I hope you find my videos useful. :)
that Fiskars paper trimmer is a life saver! I have been struggling with scissors all this time. I think you made a really good video!
Thanks for your kind comment! Im glad that the Fiskars paper trimmer has improved your PnP experience. :)
this is so helpful!! i’m making card games for family and friends as holiday presents this year and i couldn’t find a good tutorial that fits the supplies i have, i’m only 14 so i have to use what my family already has. thank you so much, this is such a good tutorial! :)
Thank you! Glad that my tutorial has been helpful to you. :)
Get yourself a Möbius + Ruppert roll cat.
I LOVED this video. You didn’t miss any steps. Thank you!
Thank you for the in depth tutorial and timestamps 😊
Hello, you have just changed my life. In a good way. Cant describe how much thankful am i.
Your videos are highly underrated! Thank You for the education!
Thank you!
you're the best, Martin, greetings from Brazil
@@gabrielcrisostimo Thank you so much for your kind words! Cheers! :)
You sir are truly an angel, this video has all the information I needed to produce my Lenormand deck!!!!! Thank you so much!!!!!!!
You're very welcome!
I was surprised so many people in the comments never thought of doing this method. I thought of doing this and fortunately created my first deck 17 years ago when i was in Junior High. We have all the supplies and materials available in my mom's office at home back then until now. After cutting the cards and make round edges, i would make another run of laminating each cards one last time.
This is the "how to video" I was looking for on card stock lamination!
Super Awesome Job Martin! Thank you so much for making a simple, easy, very well done video for us who are interested in laminating print and play games👍👍.
This will give my fast action cards for my baseball games last much longer Thank you young man
Hi Martin, thank you for creating this video showing everyone how to create their own laminated cards.
Honestly this is amazing. I wish i had this tech available when i was in grade and middle school!
“And then we’re gonna do that 130 more times then we’re done”
Yes, fantastic prospect, totally Zen. Times 4 for rounding the corners.
Thanks Martin, been looking for a great corner cutter and your endorsement sells it after seeing all your quality work on the solo FB forums. Keep up the great work and I look forward to some other tutorials to get your quality :-D
Thank you so much for taking the time to show us your beautiful tutorial I cannot wait to try your method!
You are welcome, thanks for watching! :)
After searching all over, this is the best and most informative video I've found. Ordered all of these supplies and I'm excited to get started!
Thanks for making this.
Thank you for your kind words! I am glad that my tutorial video has been helpful to you. :)
@@PnPHideaway Hi Martin. Javi0usly here again (using my other account). Just wanted to let you know that I plugged this video in our most recent upload. Thanks again for putting this tutorial together! It was super helpful.
Here's the video if you're interested: ruclips.net/video/d_bYGuTinl8/видео.html
Thank you so much for this! I was looking for a way to make my own game tokens that would hold up to wear and tear.
Thank you Martin for your video! I am very impressed with your instructions and technique and I'm so glad to have stumbled on it.
Love this, I just picked up Fallout Wasteland Warfare and its RPG expansion book and it is a mini-card heavy system. Modephius provides PDFs of all of the cards made so far and I want to print common item cards like food and meds so I can give them to the players without worrying about them losing the originals.
Great. Thank You very much. Just a tip: You can get non-glossy laminating pouches if thats what you prefer.
Thanks, I have tried them. They do not seem to adhere as well as the glossy ones, and they cost significantly more than the regular pouches. :)
@@PnPHideaway Thanks . That's good to know ( - haven't tried them the myself)
thanks for actually answering the real questions!
I wanted to say thank you for the info. I bought the exact same kit and was able to laminate my own fan-made player's boards for the game Th Grizzled Armistice. I used all your tips and it ended all very well.
You are most welcome! I'm so glad that my humble video enabled you to make your own PnP project. Thanks for letting me know! :)
So you can cut right in the middle of the laminating pouch, and the laminated plastic will not come off the paper? It basically glues the laminating sheet to the paper? I thought you had to have a plastic-on-plastic border (glued onto itself) for everything to stay together (if that makes any sense)
Yup, makes sense. I too used to think that a laminate border was needed. Turns out that the inside of the laminating pouch is coated with adhesive that activates and sticks to the paper surface when exposed to the heat from the laminator rollers. So you can cut right to the card edge, no worries there. :)
That's what wrong settings and dirt-cheap laminators do. If you laminate on higher temp than is recommended for used thickness of laminating pouches, with quality equipment and/or you run it through laminator multiple times, the lamino will fuse into the paper, and stay there even if you remove the edges. The only downside to removing plastic-on-plastic edges is that paper becomes exposed, on the edge, and card becomes slightly susceptible to water damage.
This tooooo cool! I have some magic playing cards I want to make as a prototype and your tutorial really helps... thanks!
You’re most welcome! Happy to help. :)
Thanks for the walkthrough!
Thanks Martin for these great tutorials! Makes me want to jump into PnP making immediately! Nicely done! Thanks!
Thank you! Glad that you found the tutorial helpful. :)
Great video Martin! If i need to make some pnp cards - now im ready!
Thanks for watching, and for your kind words! :)
I started doing this technique, but used a cricut to cut out the cards. Really saves a lot of time. However ive noticed even with some heavy cardstock, if you dont use black for the back of the card, say some lighter color, they are still a little transparent if you get some strong light against them. I havent found any paper that is opaque like true playing cards. Also what i dont like about cardstock is you dont get colors that pop they are very dull...wish there was a good matte paper that isnt see through to print on.
Good point about card stock and colors. I’ve started using Koala brand matte photo paper and the colors pop a lot more. :)
Hello Martin, it looks like you have a very nice printer that delivers very good quality prints with both sides. Can you share which model of printer you are using? Do you recommend something better or is that what you're using enough?
Beautiful. Thank you for sharing these great tips.❤
Thanks for watching!
Great tutorial. Super helpful. Thanks a ton.
You’re welcome! :)
It's like you have your own print shop at home. It looks so nice!
Very awesome detailed video! You’ve answered my questions.
Thanks, glad it was helpful! :)
if you don’t have a laminator, an iron will work. just keep the temperature low enough.
How low of a setting? :)
May i ask how exactly i can do that?
This is not related but can i ask can i use normal paper instead of cardstock? Tks
van cass hey man could you please tell me how to do it?
I will just spend 20 bucks😂
I have an important question: did you use a high precision printer? Because I'm a bit concerned with the alignment of the rear face with the front face. I'm planning the printing layout of my custom Clow Cards and I'm not sure if the digital precision will be maintained when it comes to actual print. Thanks.
Thank you! I think this is the best method I've seen.
Mikeala Weaver Thanks, glad you found this tutorial useful. :)
You should have some Amazon affiliate links. You are selling the heck out of their products. :)
Lol
They look excellent, and I bet they do feel great too. Can you get a matte finish laminate? The gloss is the only thing I would not like.
Snuggly Jeff I haven’t searched for matte finish laminating pouches. If I find any, I’ll post here.
Snuggly Jeff Sorry, I’m not seeing any matte finish hot lamination pouches.
Take a look on Amazon for this listing "Oregon Lamination Hot Laminating Pouches Letter (Pack of 100) 3 Mil 9 x 11-1/2-inch Matte/Matte". A bit expensive but are Matte finish.
Yes Matte lamination pouches are available, bit more expensive, but the results are amazing!
Less glare, and feel soft.
My friends couldn't even tell that the playermat for Rune Age (best interactive deckbuilder ever!)I downloaded from BGG and then laminated with matte was made by me! They thought it came in the box! :)
Regards, Salman
@@salmanqaisar7377 what brand are you using for the mat laminator pouches?
Amazon seems to have discontinued that laminator in the UK and all the others don't seem to have those thickness settings, merely cold or hot settings.
I can also recommend the Scotch brand laminator that goes for around $25-$30 US.
@@PnPHideaway Thanks :)
@@PnPHideaway Thank You
You changed my life, thanks
For the better, I hope! :)
How do you line up the front and back so you can cut it out exactly? I can't seem to line them up quite right so the backs look great, but the fronts are almost always off and it looks bad.
Hi Packer, I edit the PnP pdf files to compensate for printer shift.
@@PnPHideaway
Had the same problem.
I found that for my printer i have to adjust the one side a 1mm to the left and all is well aligned.
Very well made and informative video. Just ordered the recommended items, I’m excited to work on some custom card ideas.
Glad it was useful to you! :)
Thank you for showing! I love playing cards but gonna be using your method for yoga asanas cards 🤩
Would have never known that you could fuse the laminate better if done twice... without the laminate separating. Cool!
Very cool! Thanks for sharing this technique!
Soul Dagger You’re welcome, thanks for watching! :)
Thanks so much. SPOT ON what I was wanting to know AND see!
Ben Burris You’re welcome, thanks for the kind words! :)
Ben Burris You’re welcome, thanks for the kind words! :)
What to do if i want more thick cards like tarot cards...I should look for more thick card stock ?
Angel Tarot Readings 101 Yes, use thicker card stock and thicker laminating pouches. :)
Wow! Welcome ❣️
Hey Martin! I just made my own mini tarot cards using your technique and it worked so well. Thanks so much for your tutorial!
That's what I'm trying to do. With mini ones, but they didn't stay together when I cut them
Thank you, I’m not sure if I will do this but I have been really getting into card games recently so ya never know 😃
Do You think It is somehow possible to laminate plywood (2-3mm thick) things with paper graphics on it? Or maybe I should stick to pouring epoxy resin on it? Those laminators won't be able to accept such thick material... I think.
Hi! No, plywood is way too thick and inflexible to laminate. :)
Hi Martin,
Thanks for great tutorial.
Can you tell me what youe printer is? I ask cause 110 lb is pretty thick paper so not all printers can handle them. Looking forward to receive an answer. Best regards
So what you are saying is not to cut corners with your corner cutter?
I use nothing but my Kadomaru Pro. 😉
You don't want to cut corners on corner cutters, always choose the best: Kadomaru Pro! ;)
Nice video sir. Would be more helpful if you could share link for purchasing the supplies.
Thank you for another great video!
Thanks for watching!
I love this video this is super cool thank you for making this super informative and helpful!!
Glad it was helpful!
Hi, Martin!
I am developing my own desk game, so I was looking long and hard for a method to create profesionally looking cards, tokens, etc. for fast development and really enjoyable playtesting. Regarding making cards I independently came to very similar method as you have. Except I use "double sided matt photo paper" (which is almost the same as regular cardstock), I print it with 6-ink EPSON tank system photo printer, then I feed it through a slightly better laminator with 4 rollers, so at first I laminate only once (with matt laminating pouches), then I cut the cards via print'n'cut feature on my silhouette cameo 4, and then I run my individual cards through laminator again to better fuse lamino to the paper, and to cure the edges which might be a little corrupted after cutting. I have not yet found any significant difference in quality after running cards though laminator the second time, but also nothing yet disproved that logic of mine, so I still rather follow through.
Also if you ever need to make everlasting game plan tiles, I found the best method is to print the shape (even intricate ones) on 3D printer (I usually use white rPLA), then sand the top surface, clean it with IPA, and cover it with printable vinyl sticker (also printed then precisely cut on desktop cutter like Silhouette). Theese look really professional, last a lifetime, and overall are way better to play with than that pressed paper boards that comes with commercial games 😏 Of course, that whole equipment bundle would cost you just north of $1000 USD, but considering that laminator and inkjet printer you already have, you'll just need a desktop cutter ($199 USD for Silhouette portrait 3), and similarly priced 3D printer if you choose to make plastic tiles.
Really nice video. Do you actually play with these cards? Since I have three questions about this method: 1. Aren't the cards a little too slippery? 2. Does cuttiing through plastic make the blade of the cutter dull really fast? My third question: when playing often, do the edges of the cards split apart time a little bit (i.e. the edges of paper and laminating material)? Thanks for answering, Michael.
Hi Michael, thanks for your comment and questions! Here are my responses:
1. Nope, I find the cards have just the right amount of slide vs. friction.
2. Not really. And replacement blades are cheap. I also use a kitchen knife sharpener to sharpen my current blades if need be. :)
3. With the method I show here in this video, using these materials, I have not experienced any splitting or delamination. I have experienced delamination with some other types of paper, or when i get fance and try to construct a card from a separate front and back, glue together, then laminate. But you should be fine as long as you stick to the method and materials i show in this video. Also, rounding the card corners helps to prevent delamination at the corners/edges. Thanks for watching! :)
Fantastic! I hope there are no typos!
Thank You for the video. I don't know if to laugh or to weep for the 20 $ laminator. Some Years ago (well, MANY Years ago) I bought a GBC laminator, A3. It has seen little work, but the funny part is that its price was around 500 € .......
I just brought a laminator that has both hot and cold system incase i need it for my dad's documents. Im wondering what program and how you make it all the same size because i always been using just word documents and just drag to enlarged but idk how to make them the same size to made cards. I want to made cards of my favorite idol, also my mum has her own idol and her birthday is coming i want to do this as present to have photo cards since our printer is not a photo printer. I also brought a cutter because i remember this video
thank you, this helps me with the cards I want to make
hi! great video, but i am just wondering if it still feels like a regular playing card if i just print the cards on paper instead of cardstock.
Hi Owen, thanks for your question! I know some folks who laminate regular printer paper rather than card stock. In my experience, it feels too thin. However, you might have a better result if you pair printer paper with 5mil thermal laminating pouches rather than the 3mil pouches you see me using in this video. If you do try the 5mil pouches, please let us know how it turns out. :)
Martin Gonzalvez I’ll try the 5 mill laminating sheets as u suggested and I’ll share the results. Thanks so much!
Owen Cheb Sure thing! :)
@@owencheb622 gib results
New subscriber. :) i used label paper 8.5 x11 white and cardstock for other side. Print them and apply a few layers of transparent aerosol barnish.
Hi there! I used to make PnP cards with a card stock core, with plain paper front and back, spray glued, with protective lacquer applied. I still use that technique for some builds, but nowadays I prefer to laminate my cards. :)
Great tutorial. A conversion useful for some: 110 pound paper is 160 gsm.
110 pound cardstock = 270-308 gsm.
Source: altenew.com/pages/cardstock-sizes-and-paper-weights
@@PnPHideaway That's very curious. I used a converter, which gives about 1.5 gsm per pound. Looking closer, I see that that is for paper and there is a different conversion for "cover" stock, which would be consistent with the value you've found.
When I take a look at the Walmart site, I find 110 lb cardstock paper at about the price you mention. I don't see any cover stock, but there are many pages of search results that I haven't gone through comprehensively.
So now I'm really confused. How sure are you of the conversion? For comparison, the pack of index cards I have here would be at 170 gsm.
If you look very closely at the package on the Walmart site, they give the value in gsm! It's 199 gsm, and just barely readable in the image.
@@mijaba71 Don't know what to tell you. Every chart and guide I find online converts 110 pound card stock to around 270-310 gsm. There's a graphical chart at this link that I find illustrates the equivalents very well.
www.cardstock-warehouse.com/pages/cardstock-paper-basis-weight-chart
Nice video! That's the same laminator that we use. I also always run my PNP stuff through the laminator twice, I think it just helps the final product, and I'm glad I'm not alone in that. :D I'll need to check out that paper trimmer. I bought one a while ago, but it doesn't have a guide wire and I found my cuts to end up skewed. I still prefer and exacto knife, even to the rotary cutter because I found mine kept getting dull easily - I had to constantly press very hard. I do want to upgrade my corner cutter, and that's the one I was eyeing, so it was cool to see that in action.
Also, thanks for showing off this re-theme. I know what I'm doing after vacation. :D
Geek City USA Thanks for watching, and for your kind words! :)
how they re in long term use? peeling off? if it is can we re laminate to fix it ? thanks martin ^___^ great tut!!!!
Excellent tutorial! I definitely want to give this method a go. : )
Greetings from Brazil.
Thanks for your tutorial. I just have a doubt: Did you use an ink-jet or a laser printer, please? Thanks in advanced 😊
@@amarianareal Inkjet printer for all of my videos.
@@PnPHideaway thanks for your answer!! Success!
Hello Martin, thanks for the tutorial i really liked it but i have one big question, do you know how can i get rid off the gloss? or make them less glossy
Nobu Hi Nobu! The gloss is part of using this laminating technique. I have heard that there are matte finish laminating sheets available, but they are significantly more expensive than normal laminating sheets. I accept the gloss as part of the trade-off for the convenience of using this method to make PnP cards. :)
@@PnPHideaway I understand, thank you so much! i'd like to test the matte one someday though
Hey man, great videos.
Can you please make a video on boxes? Like telescoping boxes and tuck boxes.
And also, would cardboard paper do the trick for this?
Thanks
Long Thanks for your comment! Sadly, making game boxes is not a skill that I currently possess. I would suggest you like for “Dining Table PnP”, that’s Jake Staines’ channel, he has tutorial videos on how to make game boxes (and many other PnP-related items).
Thanks for the quick response and the recommendation.
I was wondering what weight of cardstock I should use. The card stock I am going to is is 80 lb.
@@long3974 Sounds good! If the cards end up feeling too thin, you can try using 5mil laminating pouches to increase the card thickness while using thinner paper.
Could you use nail clippers to round off the corners?
Sure, in fact I have an early video that shows just that.
@@PnPHideaway cool, thanks :)
Oooooh one of the laminators on my list comes with a corner rounder :)
Hello there Martin! That was exactly the kind of solution i was looking for!! The colors on your cards look so slick! What printer do you use?
Hello, thanks! Glad my video helped. I use an HP Officejet Pro 9018 printer. :)
@@PnPHideaway Thanks for the quick reply! :)
Hi Martin,
First of all thanks for all the tutorial. I too prefer the print and laminate method as you shown here.
However, what I repeatedly failed to do is to perfectly align the double sided printing.
I am curious of how did you manage to do that?
Thanks again for your help and hopefully you see this question and willing to share your method. Cheers!
Fantastic Video Martin! I want to ask somenting. How i find this paper you use for cards? I mean what is the name of this paper and the grams?
Thanks! In this video I used Neenah bright white 65 lb. card stock. More recently I have been using Koala brand 48 lb. matte photo paper as I find that it makes for brighter colors on my cards. :)
Thanks!!!!@@PnPHideaway
What type of printer do you have?
orabbi Hello! I have an HP Officejet Pro 8715 printer.
you are the custom card god my friend thanks!!!
Thanks for your kind words! :)
I wonder if there's some kind of matte clear coat you could spray on these that would take the gloss off them.
I’ve long since gotten used to the gloss. I think any spray would just make the cards feel, shuffle and play worse. There are matte laminating pouches you can buy, but they are significantly more expense, and anecdotally people have told me that they tend to not adhere as well.
Nice tips. I may use some of these ideas to laminate my Strat-O-Matic cards.
Sports Man Z Thanks for watching! Glad that you like some of my tips. :)
Good sir you just saved me on a big upcoming project I have. Do you happen to know the best program to make my own cards? It's for a college course and wanting to make it professional
Thanks for the excellent video. What printer do you use to be to print on 110lb card stock with double-sided?
I made this video almost four years ago. Since then I’ve switched to printing to 65 lb card stock, as eventually I found 110 lb card stock to be too thick. Plus it damaged my old HP Officejet Pro 8015 printer. Now I have an HP Officejet Pro 9018 printer. I don’t ever print to card stock thicker than 65 lb.
One thing I do is, after I cut all my laminated cards out and trim the corners if applicable, run them through the laminating machine a THIRD time (like you, I do two passes before cutting them out). I'm obsessed at getting a nicely glued lamination on the cards, as well.
I was thinking the same thing. Maybe I'm superstitious, but I have the feeling that another pass after the cutting does also "smoothen" the cut edges a bit. Idk or maybe this only happens when cutting with scissors: The edges feel a bit sharp and uneven...
Hi Martin, have you ever tried finishing your laminated cards with a matte finishing spray?
Hi Jessica! I have not tried to spray matte spray on my laminated cards. Does it work, and if so, can you recommend a good spray to use? :)
I haven't tried it either. I just ordered these matte laminating pouches from Walmart instead www.walmart.com/ip/Universal-Laminating-Pouches-3-mil-9-x-11-5-Matte-Clear-100-Box-UNV84622/15074811?comm-msg-vehicle=EMAIL&comm-msg-id=9adb2418-a6ac-4939-b067-9610ef67f99c
Hopefully they'll work :)
Does anyone know if he mentioned which printer he uses to print on his cardstock? Maybe I just missed it. Or does anyone have suggestions?
Hi Pilar! I use an HP Officejet Pro 8715 that’s about two years old. With HP Instant Ink subscription. :)
@@PnPHideaway thank you!
In a previous tutorial you mentioned that an enamel spray on the card stock helps the colors 'pop'. Do you still recommend this step prior to laminating? If it does make a visual difference, what is a good amount of time of waiting for the spray to dry before the lamination step?
I no longer spray lacquer on cards that I laminate. I find the lamination process makes the colors pop more than enough. :)
@@PnPHideaway Thankie!
What printer do you use for the picture to look so clear on the card stock?
Hi Michael, in this video I was using an HP Officejet Pro 8715 printer. Nowadays I used the upgraded model, the HP Officejet Pro 9018. :)
Did you use standard 70 gsm A4 paper to print out all the cards ? and also how many micron for the laminating sheet ?
I’m in the US, so I used 65 lb. (176 gsm) US Letter size card stock. Inserted into 3mil laminating pouches.
@@PnPHideaway Can I get the 180 gsm glossy photo paper instead ? i have the 100 micron thickness laminating pouches. Hopefully these look fine. you thought ?
Excellent presentation. I was wondering if you know where to get a template (.jpg?) to create -- meaning the artwork etc... -- the cards themselves?
Brandon Musler Thanks for your kind words! :)
Nowadays I have created a number of PnP cards and pages from scratch. I generally make a new template in Photoshop or Pixelmator for each project. I size individual cards at poker size: 2.5 inches width by 3.5 inches height, 300 dpi. I size PnP pages at US Letter, 8.5 inches width by 11 inches height. I use rulers and guides to create a grid to make sure that my individual cards are properly aligned on the page. Finally I place 1 pixel horizontal and vertical cut lines. When I’m done I export such page to PDF. Repeat the process for each page until the PnP file is completed.
@@PnPHideaway is there a tutorial about designing the cards?
Jan De Buysser ruclips.net/video/cUqwyfeCjO4/видео.html
Jan De Buysser Yes!
What kind of printer are you using and weight of card stock?
Nowadays I use an HP Officejet Pro 9018, and I print to 65 lb. (176 gsm) card stock. :)
Thanks Loads For Making This Video, 1 Of The Best Videos I've Seen, Really Useful & Helpful, Loads Of Great Tips, Thanks Loads Again :)
Rachael Louise Gerrard You are most welcome, and thanks for the kind words! :)