![]() ![]() You'd be surprised how nit-picky you'll get and which jokes to include/leave off the board. From here, you'll be able to download the entire Photoshop template and edit the names of the tiles, add photos, customize the pricing, do anything and everything you like to personalize the board. Whether the standard weight or the heavyweight paper, it's 99 cents a sheet of paper.īoth the 100 lb cover option and the Nevertear option would be less expensive than u/Mattdehaven's company, assuming you cut everything yourself, but would mean a little more work for you.Start by going to BradFrostWeb's site to download his Monopoly template. ![]() The paper I have in store is a 4.7 mil paper, and fairly standard paper weight, but we can send to our print facilities to print on a cardstock weight version (10.0 mil), and if your local store doesn't have the regular paper in store, they can send out for printing as well. I think the paper is awesome, so my store has some in our print center all the time, and I demonstrate it to people for various applications. It's got a slick smooth surface, that's almost soft to the touch, and without a hint of gloss to it. The paper is a polyester based paper, which is how it can be tearproof and waterproof, but still easy to cut. If you want something a little more durable, I know all Office Depots offer printing on NeverTear paper (it's tearproof and waterproof). You'd be able to fit anywhere from 6 to 12 cards on a sheet (I don't have a Monopoly game in front of me, I can't check, but 2x3, 2x4, or 3x4 are all quantities of cards I can see fitting on a sheet of letter size paper) It's also noticeably heavier than standard cardstock and most printers probably can't double-side it on it's own, so you'd need to have one side printed then put them back in to print the backside.Īssuming you cut the cards yourself and you get fewer than 10 sheets, it would cost 71 cents for the color side, 15 cents for the black and white side, and I believe 27 cents for the paper. It should be coated, unlike regular cardstock, but not super shiny. The paper stock closest to Monopoly property cards would be a matte 100 lb cover. Only put borders on the front sides of the cards, and use those lined up on the rotary cutter to give you nice even cuts. Then just use a rotary cutter to cut them down. They can print on both sides of the cards, and can even shift the images slightly so the fronts and backs match up better if they don't already. If you set them up properly as PDFs, you can take them to your local print shop and print them.
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