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I just need those plastic (?) material and I need them in big sheets! Where can I get them? Thanks in advance!

2007-05-27 06:39:56 · 3 answers · asked by Mr. Chantastic 2 in Arts & Humanities Visual Arts Other - Visual Arts

3 answers

Try this source. Send them and email and see if they will sell them to you in sheets.

http://www.cpicardgroup.com/blank_cards.htm

2007-05-27 07:21:22 · answer #1 · answered by Beach Saint 7 · 0 0

PDQ is right, as usual. Poker is a skill game with a luck component. A lot of players think they are better than they are. Delusions of adequacy. They are not even close to being consistent winners. They just don't lose every time. They win a few, lose a few, cash here and there -- and, overall, lose or maybe break even. (A breakeven player is in the top 10% of all players.) A certain percentage of players think that if they had the time, they could really rake up. Most are wrong. The question is whether your boyfriend is actually any good. Do what PDQ said. If he is a winning player, he will have zero problem showing you how well he's been doing, including deposit history. If he is at all serious, he will have a poker tracker and that will show exactly how he's been doing in all areas of his play. If his charts at Poker table ratings, Sharkscope and Top Shark show a steady uphill climb, he may be as good as he thinks he is. There are people whose charts head right up from nothing to plenty at a nice 45% angle, with only a few spikes up or down. That is what consistency looks like. A chart that goes up ,then down a lot, then a big spike up one day, then down and down is not consistent. It's easy to see, just from the charts, if a person is a consistently winning player and, therefore, might have a shot if surviving as a professional poker player. Then it's a matter of having a sufficient bankroll to play with (to make the amount he needs to make), and sufficient savings beyond his poker bankroll (to live on when variance hits.) And great discipline. You have not provided a picture of a guy with good discipline, but he must have that. If his charts show he is, in fact, playing consistently well, challenge him to make a specific goal within the next 6 months. If he has $1000 at one site, challenge him to turn it into $10K in that time (or make an equivalent challenge based on his bankroll), by playing at consistent times at limits within his proper bankroll management range, like a second job. 4-5 hours a day, 5 days a week or some such schedule. He is not permitted to make any deposits. He must provide full disclosure to you at any time you want but no more often than weekly. You, in turn, will not bug him about playing during that period, even though it will cut into the time you spend together. And you promise not to freak out about the weeks where things don't go well. (That can happen.) See how that goes. No fudging on his side, no bugging on your side. If he sucessfully completes his challenge, which will show a combination of self-discipline and consistency, then all he needs to do is get enough money together -- from playing -- to support both his needed bankroll and his living expenses for at least 6 months. (I also prefer a year's worth.) And during that time, you will be able to decide whether you can truly support him (not financially) in this endeavor or whether it takes too much for you to do so. Because, if he is playing full-time, that would be his "job". To stay with him, you really need to be truly OK with this. Even if he is successful in the challenge, which should reassure you a bit about the viability of this poker thing, many people are not emotionally suited to living on that particular edge. You may be one.

2016-04-01 10:47:24 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Go to the Internet.Put in a search for thr paper materials for cards.

2007-05-27 06:44:50 · answer #3 · answered by Carmello 1 · 0 1

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