![]() Unless you personally know the person cutting out the cards, you'll most likely get unseemly white edges and the occasional slanted cut, especially if their cutting machine is slightly off. My one other recommendation would be to cut the cards yourself. However, tonor is really expensive, and it'll easily be 80-85% of your total project cost. The price of the paper is, relatively, marginal it will generally cost a dollar's worth of cardstock to print a large number of cards. Publish your cards to social media web sites or export locally. Save and share your creations Instantly save and share cards with others in the community. Terranova is a custom Magic: the Gathering set comprising of 350 cards (20 of which are basic lands), and has been designed with Limited, self-contained. High quality renders means your cards feel more real and look great. Keeping in line with ikegami's comment, I would recommend not printing a back on the cards unless you expect them to be unsleeved for any great length of time. MTG.Design uses a custom renderer with the same kind of formatting and fonts you would expect to see. ![]() If they don't have a machine with a drum that can handle it, they'll know someone in the area that will. Through some experimentation at my job and a bit of research, I've discovered that to be the thickness of all trading cards. ![]() If you're looking to get the correct thickness for the cards, ask the print shop to print them on 14-point paper, or whatever they have in stock that requires a printer drum to have a rating of just over 300 psi.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |