by packrat » Thu Sep 02, 2010 2:49 am
I'm assuming that you would have more than one photo with you. You would mount the photo on a sheet of paper in the sketch pad. Then when you are ready to get the photo you want signed you would then flip to the page containing the appropriate picture. The cover and subsequent pages will protect the photos until you are ready to expose them to be signed.
And yes, you can cut out a piece of cardboard to mount the photo on. It would be a good idea to cut a second piece of cardboard to cover the photo until it is ready to be signed. But if you are carrying more than two photos a sketch pad would work best.
As for the sharpie, when they are new they tend to give a thinner signature. Some folks break them in by holding them like a knife and jabbing the point with a stabbing motion onto a surface to flatten them out a bit. I've never done that. I just let them break in as I use it. I'm fine with it if the signature comes out a little thin.
As for the penny sleeve, I was talking about once you have gotten your photo signed and removed from the cardboard or sketch pad and want to reuse the photo corners on that particular page. Sometimes the corners tighten up a bit and getting another item into them can damage the corner of the photo. That's where the penny sleeve comes in. I use them like the old fashioned shoe horn (assuming you have heard of them). I slip the penny sleeve into the photo corner first and then slide the corner of the photo under the sleeve until it is in the proper position, then gently pull the penny sleeve out.
I'm assuming that you would have more than one photo with you. You would mount the photo on a sheet of paper in the sketch pad. Then when you are ready to get the photo you want signed you would then flip to the page containing the appropriate picture. The cover and subsequent pages will protect the photos until you are ready to expose them to be signed.
And yes, you can cut out a piece of cardboard to mount the photo on. It would be a good idea to cut a second piece of cardboard to cover the photo until it is ready to be signed. But if you are carrying more than two photos a sketch pad would work best.
As for the sharpie, when they are new they tend to give a thinner signature. Some folks break them in by holding them like a knife and jabbing the point with a stabbing motion onto a surface to flatten them out a bit. I've never done that. I just let them break in as I use it. I'm fine with it if the signature comes out a little thin.
As for the penny sleeve, I was talking about once you have gotten your photo signed and removed from the cardboard or sketch pad and want to reuse the photo corners on that particular page. Sometimes the corners tighten up a bit and getting another item into them can damage the corner of the photo. That's where the penny sleeve comes in. I use them like the old fashioned shoe horn (assuming you have heard of them). I slip the penny sleeve into the photo corner first and then slide the corner of the photo under the sleeve until it is in the proper position, then gently pull the penny sleeve out.