How To Make Laminated Print and Play Cards -- 2022 Update

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 4. 06. 2024
  • (Please turn on Klingon subtitles for corrections.)
    A step-by-step tutorial on how to make laminated print and play cards. This is the 2022 update to my July 2019 laminated card tutorial that has nearly 95,000 views so far.
    Correction: at the 1:13 mark, I say that 65 pound card stock is equivalent to about 270 gsm. This is incorrect, 65 pound card stock is equivalent to 176 gsm.
    How To Make Laminated Print and Play Cards (2019 version): • How To Make Laminated ...
    If you find this video useful, why not buy me a coffee? ko-fi.com/MartinG
  • Hry

Komentáře • 159

  • @cataquet23
    @cataquet23 Před rokem +23

    Love it! One top tip that I always use is to cut from the back of the cards, so that all the backs look the same. You may consider that worse because you then see any misalignments on the face of the cards, but I think it's better because you can't accidentally mark the back of the cards.

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před rokem +4

      Great advice. As for me, it depends on the game/card design. If the card back design runs to the card edges, then it makes sense to cut from the back, and any misalignment will only be obvious from the card fronts, as you say. But if the card back design is an abstract or repeating image, or if there is white space/border around the card back image, then in those cases it makes more sense to me to cut from the front. Any misalignment on the backs is not obvious -- at least to me, and since I am primarily a solo gamer, I'm the only one that needs to worry about potentially marked cards. ;)
      So rather than an absolute "always" rule to cut from the backs, I would say, "cut from the back or the front, when it makes sense to do so." :)

  • @ZackorzeGames
    @ZackorzeGames Před 15 dny +2

    Thank you so much, that is exactly what i was looking for! I already learned basically all of this just for searching how do it, each step by step (not necessarily involving cards/tcg). But knowing someone take their time to do a complete video about doing DIY cards, is really awesome.
    Im thinking in doing a video just like that for the brazilians here in brazil. I love cards, board games and video games in general, and love to do things by myself.
    Im also planning to do like details with holographic and shiny look papers, and using a cutting plotter to cut the detail and then laminate on it.

  • @thumbsupOH
    @thumbsupOH Před rokem +14

    A brilliant tutorial as always. Thanks for taking the time to forge ahead in the print-and-play arena, learn, and experiment and then take the time to share your gains with us.

  • @jackthompson6383
    @jackthompson6383 Před rokem +6

    I can't wait to watch this after work. I watched the older video you made on this a month ago. It is what got me into making cards at home.

  • @Zenstudent105
    @Zenstudent105 Před rokem +3

    This saved me some money! I was under the impression that you needed ID card sized laminators to properly make PNP games and that cutting the 3x3 laminated paper would somehow damage them. Looks like you can laminate and cut with no issue. Great, comprehensive review!

  • @TheSpr0gz
    @TheSpr0gz Před rokem +8

    Nice video production Martin and pretty much my method of playing card production too.
    I thought it helpful to mention that most folk, if not using cards with bleed (I guess part of the content of a future video you mentioned) would advise cutting from the BACK of the cards so that at least the backs of your cards will be uniform and any misalignment will only be visible on the front of the cards. Typically there's enough room for manoeuvre on the fronts that nothing important gets cut off and from the back, especially if playing with others, nobody will be able to tell what's in your hand by cards with standout white stripes down one or more of the edges.
    Anyway, good job.

  • @fullydazed5778
    @fullydazed5778 Před rokem +4

    Dude... you are so helpful!!! If my project takes off... I will be buying you more then just a cup of coffee!!!

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před rokem

      Thank you for your kind words! Best of luck on your project! :)

  • @Angelus1981
    @Angelus1981 Před rokem +3

    Great video. Any plans when the mentioned video about perfect alignment will come? I would be quite interested in this.

  • @majorredbeard
    @majorredbeard Před 8 měsíci +1

    Thanks for the tutorial! I was wondering about running the laminator through twice, because when I tried it with regular 24lb paper, the laminating got really warped. Yes this was a test run, but I've found it to be totally fine to do it a single time, at the higher setting (5mil setting using 3mil pouches)
    I'm going to be using this to make trading cards for local sports teams!

  • @afrank525
    @afrank525 Před rokem +1

    Whoo hoo, always love your pnp knowledge!

  • @Missmerple
    @Missmerple Před 6 měsíci

    Thank you for the detailed walk through

  • @johnnaappleseed9844
    @johnnaappleseed9844 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Thanks so much!! This video was a great help!

  • @zhetarho
    @zhetarho Před rokem +9

    Great video as always! Just a quick correction for the Europeans out there: 65lbs equates to 175 gsm. I have not found that to be an available size in stores, but after some trial and error the 160gsm sheets probably come closest and still produce great cards. If they do turn out to flimsy for your taste you can go for 200 as well, but those are definitely thicker and stiffer than most playing cards

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před rokem +1

      Thanks, yeah, I realized my error in the moment. I mentioned the correct gsm both in the video description and in the Klingon subtitles. :)

    • @russellmiles2861
      @russellmiles2861 Před 11 měsíci

      I'd never heard paper gauge in Ibs. Thanks for convention.

  • @billwilliams1709
    @billwilliams1709 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Great tutorial. Just want to suggest that for a significant increase in card quality at a significant additional cost, I've tried the epson premium photo paper, luster white. Of course this would only work if you are printing the front side and using sleves, but the cards do come out beautiful. Probably not cost efficient for printing entire card sets - drivethrucards can probably do it cheaper, but for printing proxies it works great !

  • @RecklessFables
    @RecklessFables Před rokem +2

    I totally agree with the Fiskars and Kadomaru suggestions. Those two changes made a huge difference in the quality of my cards from using the cheaper stuff I'd gotten at Walmart, etc. over the years. Even better, the Fiskars was actually available at my local Michael's craft store in different sizes

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před rokem +2

      Excellent! I love Fishers cutters. They should offer me a sponsorship for all the times I have mentioned their products in my videos. ;)

  • @gabzsy4924
    @gabzsy4924 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Hello Martin! Thank you so much for the great tutorial. I am just now getting into printing my own cards and I've tested quite a few methods and since I'll be playing them inside some sleeves, my last attempt was to print on a pretty thick photographic paper with a laser printer. The quality of the print is really high (although it does exagerate the warm tones and it consistently increased contrast and saturation) but I came across a couple of issues. First, the four streight edges of the card that were formed from cutting are really thick and have this squared off look to them. I tried compressing and rounding them with my nail, by pressing and sliding it on both sides a couple of times, and while this does actually works in creating a taper and rounder feel, it also breaks tiny bits of the paper and removes paint, making the card look damaged. Is there a tool to smooth those edges without ruining the card? I think it would have to look like a small press with a roller of some kind. Would laminating them instead of printing directly into photographic paper solve this issue?

  • @StrawHatLaw13
    @StrawHatLaw13 Před rokem +1

    I appreciate this. Ty!

  • @miked5487
    @miked5487 Před rokem +1

    So helpful. Thankyou very much!

  • @robertjag167
    @robertjag167 Před rokem

    Great info! If you would be making TCG cards like Magic, Pokemon, Yu-gi-oh or One Piece, would that be a completely different route? Seeing as those cards don't
    really have that heavy gloss to it and aren't as slippery as with laminating pouches.

  • @brandefelt
    @brandefelt Před rokem +1

    Well done tutorial! 👏

  • @JulietteReacts
    @JulietteReacts Před rokem +1

    Really appreciate you putting your gsm equivalent in the description. Have printed off my first ever pack of print and play cards on some 230gsm paper… now I’m discovering the world of lamination is bizarrely complex ha! Think I may buy the Amazon Basics laminator as you’ve suggested. Just trying to work out what thickness of pouch I should (or even can) use. Looks like we use Microns~ as a measurement here!

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před rokem

      I believe that 80 microns is equivalent to 3 mil pouches, which is the most common laminating pouch thickness here in the US. :)

    • @JulietteReacts
      @JulietteReacts Před rokem +1

      @@MartinGonzalvez Amazing. Thanks for your response and this video. :)

  • @DanielECulbertson
    @DanielECulbertson Před rokem +1

    Thanks for this video! I was researching online to determine in I could trim laminated cards right to the very edge of the card (rather than having a slight "border" of the laminant left around the card to seal it inside the laminated pocket) and LOTS of people kept saying that without leaving a bit of the laminant around the card edges, it would peel off the card. It seems that you have not experienced this problem?
    I'm very relieved; leaving a laminant border around my cards would just look so sloppy and unprofessional. Thank you for setting my mind at ease! 😁👍

    • @TheSpr0gz
      @TheSpr0gz Před rokem +1

      Over time it's possible lamination at the edge of the cards can start to peel especially after a lot of shuffling where the edges can get banged together. You can help alleviate this by running the cards back through the laminator one by one after you've cut them so the laminator can squeeze right along the edges of each card. I've found these cards where I've done this to be more resilient.

  • @rmaiabr
    @rmaiabr Před měsícem +1

    Thank you for you share your knowledge with us.

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před měsícem

      You’re welcome! I’m glad this video was useful to you. :)

    • @rmaiabr
      @rmaiabr Před měsícem

      @@MartinGonzalvez It will!!! Hugs from Brasil!

  • @vina4880
    @vina4880 Před 11 měsíci +2

    Hi Martin,
    Ty for the amazing videos! I've been exploring how to make the most professional level cards for prototypes of my games and was interested in two things:
    For starters, I love that laminator! but does air get into the cards after laminating? I'd imagine that the cuts destroy the seal between the laminate ends and would eventually draw in air. Though they're prototypes, I want them to last as long as possible.
    What about the cricut for card cutting? why use the roller or the machine you used in this video? Is there a particular reason you stay away from the cutter you have?

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před 11 měsíci

      Hello, thanks for your comment.
      1. Air does not enter my cards. I have not had any delamination issues in nearly 5 years and thousands of laminated PnP cards. The cuts do not destroy the seal because the laminate bonds to the paper.
      2. Using the Cricut to cut cards sounds like a great idea to anyone who hasn’t tried it yet. My Cricut is great for tokens and dual-layer boards, which is what I use it for. But to set up the Cricut to cut just one sheet of cards, in that time it takes, I would already have cut and rounded half a dozen sheets manually. So the Cricut is a no-go for cutting full pages of laminated cards (and believe me, I have tried).

  • @andrewwalsh531
    @andrewwalsh531 Před rokem +1

    Hi Martin! I use vey similar methods in making my own board game supplementals, including cards, player aids, etc. I believe the 65 lb card stock you use (Neenah brand) equates to 176 GSM. I have experimented w/ heavier weight stock, including 110 lb cover (approx 280-300 GSM) but I have not yet been successful printing on it w/ my humble HP inkjet printer. I also use the Scotch brand 3 mil laminating sheets that you talked about, I find them to be the best I have tried, tho they are a little more expensive. As far as the Kadomaru (sp?) goes, I have them both & use them regularly but I find them lacking in cutting through heavier (laminated) stock. It requires too much effort at times! They are the best I have found so far yet I still wait for the ultimate corner rounder to become available at some point :)

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před rokem +1

      Hi Andrew, thanks for your detailed and thoughtful comment! You are correct, 65 lb card stock equates to 176 gsm. I used to print to 110 lb (300 gsm) card stock on my old HP printer, and that contributed to the early demise of that printer. Nowadays I don't print to anything thicker than 65 lb card stock. If I have to make thicker components, I print to sticker labels and affix the stickers to thicker card stock or chipboard core. As far as corner rounders go, the Kadomaru Pro Neo is my current favorite for rounding corners on my laminated cards. As for rounding corners on thicker materials, I would recommend the Oregon Laminations corner rounder or the We-R-Memory Keepers Crop-A-Dile corner rounder. Hope this helps! :)

  • @abdulkhafidsulaymaan
    @abdulkhafidsulaymaan Před rokem +1

    I love it. Meticulous.

  • @lucasfigueroa6165
    @lucasfigueroa6165 Před 7 měsíci

    Excellent

  • @writous
    @writous Před 11 měsíci +1

    super helpful. did you ever do an advanced one for the ones that arent 100%?

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před 11 měsíci

      Haven’t gotten around to making that video yet. :)

  • @walt_west11
    @walt_west11 Před 8 měsíci

    Question: what software do you use to get these to the point of printing?

  • @wafflesforlife7600
    @wafflesforlife7600 Před 3 měsíci

    Thank you very much!!!

  • @cocop2854
    @cocop2854 Před rokem +1

    Thank you for this video. You showed us all of the materials we need and gave a great tutorial. What model of printer is that?

  • @VerdeSoul
    @VerdeSoul Před 2 měsíci

    Can you please link a card playing software that I can insert my graphics I have created for a card game.

  • @Johnnylaurelli
    @Johnnylaurelli Před rokem

    Hi Martin, do you still run through the laminator at the 5 mil setting for higher heat? Looking forward to the advanced technique video for back/front alignment :)

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před rokem +2

      Hi Johnny - no longer, now I find it sufficient to use the 3 mil setting and single pass. The key is to use high quality laminating pouches, and I recommend Scotch brand pouches. :)

  • @hanz79wvu
    @hanz79wvu Před 11 měsíci

    Awesome video! Do you think that card stock would be good enough to have minimal printing over the white paper WITHOUT the words being seen from both sides?

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před 11 měsíci

      Depending on the card back design, what is printed on the other side should not be visible. But if you have a primarily light colored card back with minimalist design, then the card front may be visible.

  • @The8OJ4N
    @The8OJ4N Před rokem +1

    Nice!

  • @duelspellthegameofwizards3079

    Great video! :-)

  • @luuk790
    @luuk790 Před rokem +2

    Great video and very nice information! I am trying out different techniques including laminating for making my own cards. What do you think about fingerprints being visable on laminated prints? Or does this have to do with the quailty of the laminating pouch?

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před rokem +1

      Thanks for the kind words! I’ve never been concerned about fingerprints on the laminate. :)

    • @luuk790
      @luuk790 Před rokem

      @@MartinGonzalvez Thanks for your quick reply Martin! Never concerned in the sense that it hasn't accured or you don't mind?

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před rokem +2

      @@luuk790 I haven't really noticed any fingerprints on my cards. They don't seem to be particularly susceptible to obvious fingerprints. :)

    • @luuk790
      @luuk790 Před rokem

      @@MartinGonzalvez Ok thanks! I think it has to do with my laminating pouches being glossy and not mat + not great quality. Gonna try different things out! Thanks again for your reactions and looking forward to the alignment video :)

    • @luuk790
      @luuk790 Před rokem

      @@MartinGonzalvez Mat pouches did the trick! Do you maybe know a similar product like the Scotch Thermal Laminating Pouches that ships in Europe?

  • @floflow7491
    @floflow7491 Před rokem +1

    first of all thank you so much for this tutorial :) . Did you try using photo paper ? or can you make a video different from using card stocks and photo paper, which you think will be better.

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před rokem +1

      I don't use photo paper for my laminated cards because I'm pretty happy with the quality of cards stock, and photo paper costs significantly more than card stock. I do use photo paper for my game boards and player boards. :)

    • @floflow7491
      @floflow7491 Před rokem

      @@MartinGonzalvez thank you so much for your response . you are right i will try to use card stocks later on . Also do you have any suggestions on how to foil or how to make cards like holographic looks ?

  • @whatsonrightnow
    @whatsonrightnow Před rokem +3

    Nice tutorial. Thx. Would it make sense to pass each finished card back through the laminator just to make sure the cut edges are sealed? Or does that not really matter?

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před rokem +2

      Thanks! I used to do two laminating passes for each sheet, but I’ve found over time that it didn’t seem necessary in my case. This depends on your paper, laminating pouches, and laminator. If it makes you feel more secure about your cards being sealed, then you should pass the cards through the laminator a second time. :)

    • @adamhoward2377
      @adamhoward2377 Před rokem +1

      @@MartinGonzalvez Great advice! I did some laminating myself, but found the corner cutter could barely cut through the cardstock I used, and the laminate was a little loose on the corners of some cards. Should I run the sheets through the laminator twice next time?

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před rokem +1

      @@adamhoward2377 That’s certainly something you can try if one laminating pass doesn’t produce satisfactory results.

  • @josephlevin
    @josephlevin Před 2 měsíci +1

    Martin, Excellent video. Very helpful. Could you let us know which printer you are using as the quality seems very nice. Thanks!

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před 2 měsíci

      Thanks! My printer is an HP Officejet Pro 9018

    • @josephlevin
      @josephlevin Před 2 měsíci

      Thanks for that, Martin. The printer seems like it has excellent quality. About how many full-page color prints can you get per set of cartridges, if you had to guess? I'm trying to figure out what is more cost-effective: UPS laser printing or home inkjet printing. I'm pretty stoked about trying your lamination method for cards, once I get the proper equipment. I'm currently printing at UPS, cutting out with scissors, then sliding each side of the card into sleeves. It works well enough, but the lamination "twice baked" method seems an order of magnitude better.@@MartinGonzalvez

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před 2 měsíci

      I actually don't know, I don't keep track of how much I can print per set of cartridges because I'm on the HP Instant Ink plan, which is like a monthly subscription for ink. I pay $13 a month and I can print up to 300 full color pages per month (a limit I almost never reach nowadays).@@josephlevin

    • @josephlevin
      @josephlevin Před 2 měsíci

      Thank you, Martin. I'll look into that if I decide to get a similar printer.@@MartinGonzalvez

  • @JulietteReacts
    @JulietteReacts Před rokem +1

    Silly question but I’m imagining that cutting the cards after they’ve been laminated will leave them with “fresh edges”? Or does the laminating pouch kinda press together along the edges when they’re cut?
    Edit: looks like you’ve addressed this in another comment :)

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před rokem

      Yup, as long as your laminator is providing enough heat, when the laminate + card stock pass through, the heat activates the glue inside the laminating pouch and causes it to bond to the card stock within. No delimitation issues or, as you call them, fresh edges. They just feel like plastic-coated playing cards. :)

  • @KuittheGeek
    @KuittheGeek Před rokem +1

    Would you say this method makes cards that are close to standard playing cards? Would I be better off spending the time to print the cards on linen, spray with the acrylic, and glue with spray adhesive to get cards that feel like professionally made cards? I am looking to build a set of cards for a community made game expansion, and I figure that if I am going to do it, I might as well do it right. So what would give the best results? I assume the linen paper, as it seems a popular option, but I figured I would ask you, since I know you have done both.

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před rokem

      Hi there! The method I outline here yields print and play cards that, in my opinion, perform well, shuffle well, are durable, feel good in hand, and are also fairly easy and convenient to produce. They are very close to plastic-coated manufactured playing cards. Which few different from linen-finish playing cards. If linen finish cards that are close to manufactured playing cards is the style you are going for, then you would be better served by following the procedure described by my friend Rachel Bruner in this tutorial video: czcams.com/video/DgNJmAkO1_M/video.html
      Hope this helps! :)

    • @KuittheGeek
      @KuittheGeek Před rokem

      @@MartinGonzalvez Awesome, thanks for the reply! I had actually just watched that video from Rachel Bruner as well, which was what prompted my question. I think I might use her technique for the expansion I am looking to build, but I will try yours on some other cards that I would like to try out as well. Thanks!

  • @teacherx2
    @teacherx2 Před rokem +1

    Is there a reason you changed up the weight of your card stock from your previous video?

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před rokem +1

      Yes, in the time between the two videos I have found that 65 lb. card stock laminated in 3 mil pouches produces cards that look, feel and play closest to manufactured plastic-coated playing cards. :)

  • @theboatnut1540
    @theboatnut1540 Před rokem +1

    17:15 the red display on the right side of the screen looks like its saying RUN

  • @ketami2
    @ketami2 Před rokem +1

    Not quite the same but I got the kickstarter marvel united x-men with only the cardstock dashboards. Unfortunately some of them arrived dented and a little ripped. I was thinking of laminating them, but now I'm thinking of scanning them first and touching up the digital file. This way I have a copy that I can print out and laminate just like your cards here. I will probably still laminate the cardstock but think i shoule have the file first just in case. Does this sound reasonable or am I crazy? I'm not sure anymore.

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před rokem +1

      Well you can laminate your cards but they will look and feel different from your printed cards, if that matters.

    • @ketami2
      @ketami2 Před rokem +1

      @@MartinGonzalvez it really doesn't matter to me what they feel like. I just want the longevity.

  • @mrjspancakehouse
    @mrjspancakehouse Před rokem

    Are you using the 9 inch or 12 inch laminator? Funny question but not sure which to get.

  • @MissMyraShanell
    @MissMyraShanell Před 11 měsíci

    I want to create my own card game and print it out just like that. Does anyone know a website I can use to design and completely create my own card game? Then print it out with 9 cards to a sheet just like that??

  • @AA-in6bm
    @AA-in6bm Před 3 měsíci

    Is this cold lamination? If it's hot... how do you get the lamination to stick when you cut? My lamination sheets only stick to themselves... but I heard cold lamination is like s sticky film you peel that dosnt require a machine. Let me know!

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před 3 měsíci

      This is hot lamination. The inside of the laminating pouches is coated with a heat activated adhesive. When you pass the item through the laminator, the heat activates the adhesive and it sticks to the paper inside. If your laminating pouches are not behaving in this way, then switch to a different brand (I use Scotch brand thermal laminating pouches), and make sure that your laminator is generating enough heat to activate the adhesive coating inside the pouch.

  • @ronniervg3952
    @ronniervg3952 Před rokem

    I need you to make a version with holographic card stock NEED!

  • @proxima7921
    @proxima7921 Před 5 měsíci

    Hello!! Quick question, do these cards feel stiff like normal cards or do they feel very flimbsy when you're using them? Thank you!

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před 5 měsíci

      To me they feel exactly like plastic-coated playing cards. Perfect weight and table presence. The only difference is that these laminated cards are more glossy than regular plastic coated cards.

    • @proxima7921
      @proxima7921 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@MartinGonzalvez Okay cool! Thank you so much! 😁

  • @lodthefraud4993
    @lodthefraud4993 Před 10 měsíci

    I watched the print-and-play cards video from four years ago, in which you used spray glue - Which method is better? Spray glue, or Manual Duplex? And what are the advantages of each?
    Both videos were great, super informative!

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před 10 měsíci

      Well, for the last 4+ years I’ve been laminating my PnP cards full time. Does that answer your question about which method I think is better? ;)
      Spray glue method requires a lot more steps, costs more, takes longer. On the plus side, it yields perfect front-back alignment. Laminated PnP cards are faster to produce and much cheaper. But can be more challenging to align front-back.

    • @lodthefraud4993
      @lodthefraud4993 Před 10 měsíci

      @@MartinGonzalvez Makes sense! I really appreciate the response, this will be perfect for the project I'm working on for my D&D game!

  • @dylangosling1640
    @dylangosling1640 Před 7 měsíci

    I really wish you went into more detail on how you format your cards, what program you use and how to dimension them.

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před 7 měsíci

      That’s a different tutorial video. I use Pixelmator to design the individual graphical elements of my cards, and I use Multideck to compose my card layouts and integrate all the graphical elements. Search my videos for “how to design print and play cards”.

  • @george_a79
    @george_a79 Před 10 měsíci +2

    Quick question, in order to make a print and play character card, for a dungeon crawling game, what paper is best to use or better what would you suggest based on your experience that should fit. I like this method that you are using here to make your cards, but I might stick to the previous version, not sure yet. Thanks once more for the information and experience you share in your channel.

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před 10 měsíci

      I recommend the same Neenah brand 65 pound card stock that I show in this video. :)

    • @george_a79
      @george_a79 Před 10 měsíci

      @@MartinGonzalvez Forgive me, what I meant was the Hero character card, you know this one is usually thicker than the normal cards.

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@george_a79 For thicker boards, I tend not to laminate. Instead, I print to matte photo paper (such as HP Everyday Photo Paper), which I mount to 1-2mm cardboard or chipboard, using 3M Super 77 spray glue.

    • @george_a79
      @george_a79 Před 10 měsíci

      @@MartinGonzalvez Ok I see. Thanks once more

  • @TYTYEBO
    @TYTYEBO Před rokem +2

    Why do you prefer a glossy laminating film instead of using a matt? What advantages are?

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před rokem +2

      I don't prefer glossy laminating pouches, they are just cheaper and much more readily available than matte pouches. Maybe I'll try matte pouches one day. :)

    • @TYTYEBO
      @TYTYEBO Před rokem

      I see. Thanks. I thought there were some benefits in using glossy pouches.

    • @TheSpr0gz
      @TheSpr0gz Před rokem

      I find matte pouches whilst they look better (no shine/glare) for me they don't shuffle as well. They are almost "silky smooth" and my thumb doesn't gain enough friction on them so when dealing by pushing cards off the deck with my thumb, my thumb will often slip on the top of the card and nothing will get dealt requiring some manual faffing with the deck to deal a card off the top.
      With glossy pouches I don't have that problem, they provide a bit of friction and slide off each other really nicely however they suffer from glare under certain lighting conditions.
      Swings and roundabouts I guess.

  • @SisuBudgets
    @SisuBudgets Před 16 dny

    Does the cards open from the lamination seals around the sides of the playing cards?

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před 16 dny +1

      No. Modern thermal laminating pouches have a coating of heat activated glue inside. It sticks the laminate to the paper inside.

  • @apricotdog
    @apricotdog Před rokem +1

    May I ask what printer you have please and are you happy with it?

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před rokem

      HP Officejet Pro 9018, and yes, I am very happy with it. :)

  • @josephlevin
    @josephlevin Před 2 měsíci +1

    Martin, I'm imminently going to be getting a decent printer and supplies to make laminated cards using your method. Do you have any advice for making sure your printer can a) print straight on a sheet of paper, and b) line up the rear cards on the reverse with the front side of the paper. I just tried using my HP Laserjet M110W to do a test print, and no matter what I do with the tray feed adjustment bars, the sheet comes out slightly off-kilter. I haven't even tried printing manually on the reverse yet. I'd love to hear your advice. I also learned something interesting- if I print a PNG or JPG sized US-letter sheet at 300 dpi to the printer, even with scaling to fit disabled, the cards come out slightly smaller than required. If I print the PNG to a PDF without scaling, then print the PDF without scaling, the card prints exactly to the proper size. I can't understand why this is so. My guess is the PDF gives the printer more sizing information. Have you experienced this?

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před 2 měsíci +1

      > Do you have any advice for making sure your printer can a) print straight on a sheet of paper, and b) line up the rear cards on the reverse with the front side of the paper.
      This is one of the toughest challenges in PnP, because precise front-back alignment is not a task that most small home/office level printer were designed to perform. On my current HP Officejet Pro 9018 printer, I am fortunate that manual duplex printing yields good to great front-back alignment most of the time. Things that help me get good front-back alignment are:
      1. Manual duplex printing: I print all the front pages first, arrange the stack in the proper order, reinsert into the print tray, and then print all the backs.
      2. Ensure the paper tray is ½ to ¾ filled with paper. I have observed that I get much better front-back alignment when the paper tray is full of paper than when it is nearly empty.
      3. Stick to thinner card stock. I have observed that the sweet spot of paper thickness for my current printer is 48 lb matte photo paper to 65 lb. card stock. Anything thicker, and front-back alignment goes haywire.
      > if I print a PNG or JPG sized US-letter sheet at 300 dpi to the printer, even with scaling to fit disabled, the cards come out slightly smaller than required. If I print the PNG to a PDF without scaling, then print the PDF without scaling, the card prints exactly to the proper size. I can't understand why this is so. My guess is the PDF gives the printer more sizing information. Have you experienced this?
      I always print PDF files, never image files. And I also print from a dedicated PDF viewer such as Preview on Mac, or Adobe Acrobat Reader. I never print from a web browser. PDF's so indeed provide more print and image sizing information, and when well prepared provides the highest level of accurate reproduction of the original.
      Hope these tips help! :)

    • @josephlevin
      @josephlevin Před 2 měsíci +2

      Absolutely. Thank you for this excellent advice.@@MartinGonzalvez

    • @josephlevin
      @josephlevin Před 2 měsíci +1

      Martin, I just tried your method of making laminated cards. It works beautifully. Thank you for your excellent advice. I ended up buying a HP8025e printer, an Amazon Basics 12" wide hot/cold laminator, 3 mil scotch laminator pouches, the 65lb Neenah card stock, the Kadomaru corner rounder, and the Fiskars surecut. I was able to figure out how to get zero left-right offset printing error by aligning the paper to the right side of the tray. Up-down offset is still a problem, but I'll figure out something. I still think that the cards I constructed will need to be sleeved if they require frequent shuffling, but that's fine by me. And, yes, cutting the cards from the back of the sheet is key. So, in a nutshell, I am very happy. Thanks again!

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před 2 měsíci

      @@josephlevin I’m happy that my recommendations led to a good experience for you! :)

  • @IAMARTIST87
    @IAMARTIST87 Před rokem

    Hi 👋🏾 love the video! I have a question. I would like to make cards. But my printer can't print on cardstock from what I've seen. Is it possible to make decent cards from photo paper?

    • @IAMARTIST87
      @IAMARTIST87 Před rokem

      I did research and it said my epson et 150000 can handle one sheet of card stock 68lb. But the paper type settings on the printer isn't available so im lost at what to do.

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před rokem +2

      @@IAMARTIST87 Have you tried just inserting sheets of 65 lb card stock and test printing to them, evaluate the result?
      Also, on some printers the setting isn’t on the printer itself, but in the Print dialog on your computer, tablet or phone. Try to check that.

    • @IAMARTIST87
      @IAMARTIST87 Před rokem

      @Martin Gonzalvez sorry im late! I looked on the computer and tablet. I don't have that setting for this printer 😔 I did order the paper any way and tried it. It looks ok.. but it's probably not at the best quality it could be

    • @IAMARTIST87
      @IAMARTIST87 Před rokem

      @@MartinGonzalvez unless I test it on *plain paper/bright white paper* setting and see what happens

  • @FrozenKowPlays
    @FrozenKowPlays Před 23 dny

    You should tell us the exact printer you used. It seems to be a HP OfficeJet Pro of some model

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před 23 dny

      It’s an HP Officejet Pro 9018. Since I made this video I retired that printer and am now using an HP Smart Tank 7301.

  • @marienitanell1960
    @marienitanell1960 Před měsícem

    Can i round the corners without a machine like manually using a scissors?

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před měsícem

      Hello, you can use nail clippers to round corners if you don't have a dedicated corner rounder. :)

  • @theta9092
    @theta9092 Před rokem

    Have you made any foil or holographic cards with this method? If so, do they turn out well? If you have any suggestions for holo/foil card printing I'd love to see a video on it!

  • @TheSailingDentist
    @TheSailingDentist Před rokem

    Hello, please can you tell us more about the printer you are using?

  • @user-pc2fe4ev1s
    @user-pc2fe4ev1s Před 3 měsíci

    Don't you have delamination issues when you cut the laminated card stock because you break the vacuum seal and air can get in between the card and the laminate?

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před 3 měsíci

      No, because the inside of the pouch is coated with heat activated adhesive that sticks to the card stock inside. I’ve never had delamination issues in 5 years of producing cards this way.

    • @user-pc2fe4ev1s
      @user-pc2fe4ev1s Před 3 měsíci

      @@MartinGonzalvez Hello Martin, thank you for your speedy reply. I didn't know this lamination pouches also come in an adhesive version, I only knew the regular ones.

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před 3 měsíci

      @@user-pc2fe4ev1s At this point most laminating pouches I have tried already have this adhesive coating inside. I think the pouches that don’t stick to the material within, and you have to leave a border for the laminate to stick to itself are very old style. Most modern laminating pouches that are commonly available work as I have described, by fusing with the material inside to form a bond.

  • @eyerieone
    @eyerieone Před 7 měsíci

    How long until the cards start to delaminate? I can't imagine they stay together for too long after cutting the laminated page do they??

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před 7 měsíci +1

      Cards I laminated in 2018 are still fine now.

    • @eyerieone
      @eyerieone Před 7 měsíci

      @@MartinGonzalvez wow that's awesome! I didn't k ow the lamination actually adhered to the paper ..I always just assumed it sealed at the edge and if you broke that edge it separated. Maybe I've just had bad laminations in the past.

  • @JosephLachh
    @JosephLachh Před rokem

    I have a question. Wouldn't cutting the laminate (especially rounding the corners) show the paper? I don't understand how you wouldn't ruin the seal you just made. I've never laminated before.

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před rokem +1

      I’ve been laminating for nearly four years. As it turns out, the insides of the laminating pouches are coated with heat-activated adhesive. So the laminate bonds to the paper, you don’t need to leave a border of laminate to bond to the laminate on the other side. You can cut the cards right to the edges and the laminate will not peel off. Unless your laminator is not providing enough heat to activate the adhesive. :)

    • @JosephLachh
      @JosephLachh Před rokem +2

      @@MartinGonzalvez That's really cool. Thanks!

    • @mabinin427
      @mabinin427 Před rokem +1

      @@MartinGonzalvez I just finally tried this method making Galdor's Grip and it works great but after all the cuts, the laminate can somewhat be peeled off. Any rec's to fix this other than just sleeving them?

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před rokem

      @@mabinin427 That usually happens if the laminator isn’t hot enough. Try passing the cards through the laminator again.

    • @mabinin427
      @mabinin427 Před rokem

      @@MartinGonzalvez even though they're already cut would they be able to go through the laminator again? The laminate for the most part is stuck in the middle of the card but the edge adhesive has weakened.

  • @TechnoPhoenix
    @TechnoPhoenix Před rokem +1

    What printer did you use?

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před rokem +1

      HP Officejet Pro 9018

    • @TechnoPhoenix
      @TechnoPhoenix Před rokem

      @@MartinGonzalvez Thanks a lot for replying! :) I really appreciate it.
      I cant find that printer, in my country, but I saw this: HP OfficeJet Pro 7740 Wide Format All-in-One Printer... will this do?

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před rokem +1

      @@TechnoPhoenix Basically any modern printer should be more than capable of printing PnP projects. :)

  • @raragrace5040
    @raragrace5040 Před měsícem

    Should always cut the paper before laminating to seal the edges

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před měsícem

      I beg to differ. I have been laminating first then cutting for five years. I've made thousands of cards this way. I have never had a problem with delamination or edges peeling.

    • @raragrace5040
      @raragrace5040 Před měsícem

      @@MartinGonzalvez not trying to be rude, just speaking from my own experience, whenever my kids (at home and work) get a hold of something laminated it always lasts longer when the edges are sealed

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před měsícem

      @@raragrace5040 We’ll just have to agree to disagree. I have crafted nearly 200 print and play games, the vast majority of my cards produced using the exact procedure that I show in this video. I stand by my personal experience and the procedure that I show in this video. Many other folks have used this method as well, with satisfaction.

    • @MartinGonzalvez
      @MartinGonzalvez  Před měsícem +1

      @@raragrace5040 I think I know the source of confusion. I use thermal, laminating pouches, which have a thin layer of adhesive on the inside. This adhesive is activated by heat and pressure. The adhesive sticks directly to the paper or card stock being laminated. Thus with thermal, laminating pouches,there is no need to seal the edges. Because the laminate itself sticks to the surface of the item being laminated.

    • @raragrace5040
      @raragrace5040 Před měsícem

      @@MartinGonzalvez ah okay, that’s cool I didn’t know you could get adhesive laminating pouches, I might have to suggest those at our next staff meeting 😆