![]() I would *love* to hear someone's thoughts that has experience with more than one of these optionsĪny insights to my current thoughts, anything I've missed, answers to my questions, etc. Click the trash can icon to delete the value, and. I personally want an unsleeved experience so my options are plastic with "card game" or "gloss" finish or Linen with one of those finishes or "BETA" finish. To delete information from a card, click the card to open it, then hover over the value you want to delete. Does anyone have experience getting larger boxes? I can infer from the design template of the 612 card box that the cards would be side-loaded in one row as opposed to the frontload of the small box but I'd love to hear anyone's experience or a picture of their larger box. The one featured in their video looks fine but it's obviously for a standard (small) deck of cards. I'm interested in putting my own art on a "custom rigid box" for my finished project. which tool to create my custom cards for print? I've played around with Magic Set Editor/Card Conjourer/MTG Cardsmith/Magic Card Maker and they each have pros and cons aesthetically but can anyone confirm if any of them are particularly good or bad when it comes to converting to a finished printed product or whether one is more forgiving for a larger scale project than others? Other questions I can't find great answers to are: use S30/S33 if you want to mimic blue core MTG or linen/plastic cardstock for unsleeved/standalone use poker size cards (unsure if 63x88mm or 63.5x88.9mm) ![]() save each custom card as a PNG in a floating black background to ensure proper border in printing be sure to remove copyright data from the frame/cardback I've been observing the process and taking some notes from various comments and have found the following best practices: Magic The Gathering, magic cards, singles, decks, card lists, deck ideas, wizard of the coast, all of the cards you need at great prices are available at Cardkingdom. That being said, the project(s) that I'm most excited in pursuing with MPC involve me making my own custom cards that aren't yet available in the existing databases. I'm utterly astounded at the MPCautofill project and all of the work users have put into empowering the lay-person to be able to quickly, easily, and legally print such high quality alternatives to traditional playing cards. I've very thankful to have just recently found this community and MPC in general.
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