Mandrake wrote:A mate of mine interleaves sandpaper with his sheets of toilet tissue. Apparently in life you just have to take the rough wih the smooth...
Hence the saying, as rough as old ah... maybe not here, eh?
Moonbeam, the best type of craft guillotine is one with a proper blade. Have a look for the Craft Tonic one:
http://www.crafting.co.uk/product.php/1 ... ine_8_20cm(I am not saying buy from this site, merely that it's got a nice big picture for you). X-Cut make (or made) an absolutely identical one, originally in blue, then later in pink, so try searching under that brand too. It might be cheaper! (As an example, see here:
http://www.craftydevilspapercraft.co.uk ... otines.asp).
I know it's not cheap, especially if you have to pay postage, but this is a good quality guillotine. One word of advice - you will obviously make sure you keep your fingers clear of the blade. You must also, however, keep your knuckles clear of the metal guide next to where the blade comes down.
It will be a bit of a slog shaving off 1mm from a card 104 times, though. The sander option may be a lot easier, especially if the cards have a nice slippery finish, and you end up with wonky edges when the card moves a fraction while you are cutting.
Corner rounders are trickier, because you get all sorts of different radii. Good craft ones may tell you the redius, but finding an exact match might not be easy. I am fairly sure someone here once posted about the exact size you need for playing cards.
The Crafty Devils site I mentioned above has 10mm, 5mm, 1/2 inch and 1/4 inch rounders, and I have seen a "Corner Chomper" that does 1/8 and 3/8 inch corners. The Corner Chompers are quite expensive, but designed for things like chipboard, so fairly robust.