You are Here:
Your top 3 in these categories

Author (Read 4476 times)

Re: Your top 3 in these categories
« Reply #25 on: September 10, 2014, 02:30:13 AM »
 

Don Boyer

  • VP/Dir. Club Forum/DAC Chair, 52 Plus Joker
  • Administrator
  • Forum Sentinel
  • *
  • 19,172
    Posts
  • Reputation: 415
  • Pick a card, any card...no, not THAT card!

  • Facebook:

USPCC offers embossed and smooth (dont mess with smooth for fans), then a couple paper stocks. Your going to be hard pressed to find a huge difference between custom prints.

LPCC has a PVC coating that last a bit longer, which some like and others don't.

Smooth Aladdins fan very nicely - that rule about smooth decks is mostly but not always true, especially now that designers with USPC get Magic Finish by default.

Trivia: burning PVC creates a toxic gas that's lethal to humans.  It's why it's no longer used for electrical conduit in New York, just for plumbing drains.  The city found this out the hard way during an electrical fire in a train station before the ban.  So if you get cards with that finish, don't burn them!
Card Illusionist, NYC Area
Playing Card Design & Development Consultant
Deck Tailoring: Custom Alterations for Magicians and Card Mechanics
Services for Hire - http://thedecktailor.com/
Pre-Made Decks for Sale - http://donboyermagic.com/
 

Re: Your top 3 in these categories
« Reply #26 on: September 10, 2014, 11:35:39 AM »
 

DarkDerp

  • Discourse Veteran
  • *
  • 262
    Posts
  • Reputation: 36

USPCC offers embossed and smooth (dont mess with smooth for fans), then a couple paper stocks. Your going to be hard pressed to find a huge difference between custom prints.

LPCC has a PVC coating that last a bit longer, which some like and others don't.

Smooth Aladdins fan very nicely - that rule about smooth decks is mostly but not always true, especially now that designers with USPC get Magic Finish by default.

Trivia: burning PVC creates a toxic gas that's lethal to humans.  It's why it's no longer used for electrical conduit in New York, just for plumbing drains.  The city found this out the hard way during an electrical fire in a train station before the ban.  So if you get cards with that finish, don't burn them!

You stepped in it now. Hope you have a legal pad and some sort of  writing instrument handy cause Don will be by shortly to school you in the  differences between finish and coa... WAIT!!!    Don?   

What have you done with Don, Fiddler?!
I like to call paper coatings a finish. It makes Don happy.
 

Re: Your top 3 in these categories
« Reply #27 on: September 10, 2014, 07:16:12 PM »
 

Card Player

  • Extraordinaire
  • *
  • 1,054
    Posts
  • Reputation: 28

USPCC offers embossed and smooth (dont mess with smooth for fans), then a couple paper stocks. Your going to be hard pressed to find a huge difference between custom prints.

LPCC has a PVC coating that last a bit longer, which some like and others don't.

Smooth Aladdins fan very nicely - that rule about smooth decks is mostly but not always true, especially now that designers with USPC get Magic Finish by default.

Trivia: burning PVC creates a toxic gas that's lethal to humans.  It's why it's no longer used for electrical conduit in New York, just for plumbing drains.  The city found this out the hard way during an electrical fire in a train station before the ban.  So if you get cards with that finish, don't burn them!

You stepped in it now. Hope you have a legal pad and some sort of  writing instrument handy cause Don will be by shortly to school you in the  differences between finish and coa... WAIT!!!    Don?   

What have you done with Don, Fiddler?!

Ahhh , you lost me.
 

Re: Your top 3 in these categories
« Reply #28 on: September 11, 2014, 12:55:50 PM »
 

Don Boyer

  • VP/Dir. Club Forum/DAC Chair, 52 Plus Joker
  • Administrator
  • Forum Sentinel
  • *
  • 19,172
    Posts
  • Reputation: 415
  • Pick a card, any card...no, not THAT card!

  • Facebook:

Ahhh , you lost me.

Most people think the card's finish is the liquid coating placed on the paper for durability.  Because the card's texture was applied to the liquid coating, it was indeed true for older decks, nothing much older than the early 1970s.

These days, it's not.  The finish is the texture or lack thereof of the card itself, while the coating is applied separately.  USPC keeps the old names around, which creates the confusion.

I often have to point this out to others.  DarkDerp's signature is a testament to this.  But, being the human being that I am, I do occasionally make mistakes!

Can we NOW return to the topic at hand, ladies and gentlemen?   ;)
Card Illusionist, NYC Area
Playing Card Design & Development Consultant
Deck Tailoring: Custom Alterations for Magicians and Card Mechanics
Services for Hire - http://thedecktailor.com/
Pre-Made Decks for Sale - http://donboyermagic.com/