The Dunkin Donut boxes reminds me about this advertising card material I collected. Heavier than the donut boxes, its a heavy coated paper about .030" Great for all kinds of things. Not sure they are sending it out any more though. Keep an eye on your mail!
I remember and article (but not where I read it) about a guy who built incredible structures using Dunkin Donut boxes. I don't think my diabetes would tolerate the material gathering phase.
Mike
KenK,
If You have a Staples near You, take a look at their Poster Board/Illustration board. A lot denser than paper pad carboard, box cardboard. Great for scratchbuilding and structures. Also You can look at their foam board, there are many different kinds/sizes. I personally use Illustration board made by Royal Eco Brites 20x30'' approx. 1/16'' thick, both sides smooth, for just about all My scratch building projects, along with white pine wood that I cut Myself. Extremely strong structures.
Take Care!
Frank
I remember reading articles many years ago about EL Moore and the card stock buildings he made. All black and white articles so never could see how well they really looked.
He did use a lot of balsa to make them ridgid.
I remember he used card stock but don't remember exactly what type. I recycled all my old MRR magazines a few years ago.
Rich
If you ever fall over in public, pick yourself up and say “sorry it’s been a while since I inhabited a body.” And just walk away.
Personally I, too prefer the cardstock from cereal boxes, but I only use this material to build mock-ups. I prefer either wood or styrene for building the actual model. I keep a stack of flattened cereal boxes just for making mock-ups. Sometimes I do use cardstock though, for the base for roofs on structures with either strip wood or strip styrene as a reinforcement. One thing is: you can't beat the price!
It is called "Chipboard"
It has been called chipboard long before somebody tried to call a sheed of lumber by the same name. Lumber might be particle board, or oriented strand board, but chipboard is a carboard product.
By definition, Chipboard is a recycled, low quality cardboard.
[which is why printers do not like to cut the stuff on their papercutters.]
Thus spake the LION, and while you may apply the word differently, the LION is correct. Him used to be a printer as a hobby. You know, hand set led type locked up in a chase and used in a platen press.
Him used chipboard when making pads.
ROAR
The Route of the Broadway Lion The Largest Subway Layout in North Dakota.
Here there be cats. LIONS with CAMERAS
CattCheck out the cardstock used for cereal boxes
That stuff is referred to as "boxboard."
Old Thumper I have always thought of "Card Stock" as index cards or business cards. For the heavier cardboard material you are looking for, how about used packaging? Athearn BB HO car kit boxes for example. Or shoe boxes.
I have always thought of "Card Stock" as index cards or business cards. For the heavier cardboard material you are looking for, how about used packaging? Athearn BB HO car kit boxes for example. Or shoe boxes.
Yes, one can salvage old boxes, but I want know how to get what I need when I need it.
Chipboard. I figured there was a specific name for it. Thanks.
One man with courage is a majority!
Another possible source might be printing companies who make up pads commercially. They might even have off cuts or scrap available for nothing.
Dave
P.S. My card stock is called styrene.
I'm just a dude with a bad back having a lot of fun with model trains, and finally building a layout!
Check out the cardstock used for cereal boxes.Myself I prefer the 110 ib. card stock but then I always layer my buildings any way using at least 4 layers of card stock to get some realism in the way the building looks.
I'm familiar with an older building product called "chipboard", but it certainly wasn't anything like cardstock, as it was for full-size building.Traditionally, the term "cardstock" referred to Strathmore Board or a somewhat similar product known as Bristol Board. It was used, usually with wood framing, for scratchbuilding structures back in the days when I started out in model railroading. In those days, you could also buy books of structures printed on cardstock. Carefully cut-out using a sharp blade, then folded and braced with stripwood, a modeller could have decent looking structures at a reasonable cost.Much more accomplished modellers (Jack Work is the one who springs to mind for me, but there were lots of such craftsmen in those days) used it, with stripwood, for scratchbuilding, and the results were simply amazing.Both of the types mentioned should still be available in art supply stores, and both should also be available in various weights (thicknesses).
Wayne
It is called "Chipboard".
Find it in craft stores.
Look on goooogle...
https://www.walmart.com/ip/Medium-Weight-Chipboard-Sheets-12X12-Natural-25-Pkg/10881055
I've been looking for the kind of card stock one finds on the back of a scratchpad
or legal pad. All I find is either heavy paper, like 110lb card stock which is .009"
thick, or matboard, like for picture framing which is .055" thick - and pricey.
The stuff on the back of scratchpads/legal pads is .020"-.040' thick.
Certainly, someone out there sells such a thing. Anybody know where to look
or a different name for it?