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| Thread ID: 81047 | 2007-07-13 23:53:00 | Card/ Paper | tutaenui (1724) | Press F1 |
| Post ID | Timestamp | Content | User | ||
| 568931 | 2007-07-13 23:53:00 | A young friend of mine has taken up assembling cut out paper kits downloaded from the web but is having trouble finding suitable card stock. Can anyone point me to a source of A4 card. It needs to be thicker/stiffer than photo paper, but still thin/flexible enough to go through an inkjet printer. | tutaenui (1724) | ||
| 568932 | 2007-07-14 00:01:00 | Warehouse Stationery have a good range of heavy paper and cardboard. | FoxyMX (5) | ||
| 568933 | 2007-07-14 00:06:00 | At good prices too! | winmacguy (3367) | ||
| 568934 | 2007-07-14 02:13:00 | 120gsm - 150gsm should be what you're looking for... | johcar (6283) | ||
| 568935 | 2007-07-14 02:43:00 | Warehouse Stationery have a good range of heavy paper and cardboard. They did have a good range called "Kaskad" that seems to have been dropped. I used the Kaskad 225gsm for folding cards. The replacement brand has nothing near as useful. I've just tried some "Craftwork" white 220gsm from the Warehouse but it is too thick to go through a Canon printer. The weight of paper depends on the surface treatment same gsm without white finish etc = thicker. |
PaulD (232) | ||
| 568936 | 2007-07-14 04:16:00 | Have a look inside the printer: there might be a lever which changes the head bar position to allow for envelopes/thick paper. I know some Epsons have this. | Graham L (2) | ||
| 568937 | 2007-07-14 06:34:00 | Go visit your local printer. they always have off cuts lying around, also deleted stock sitting on shelfs | plod (107) | ||
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