141 lines
8.1 KiB
Plaintext
141 lines
8.1 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 1521
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Title: HPR1521: Cardboard Greeting Cards
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1521/hpr1521.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 04:35:32
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---
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Greetings listeners of Hector Public Radio.
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My name is Shane Shannon and I'm a computer instructor living in Niagara Falls, Ontario.
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But today I'm not going to talk about computers.
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Instead, I'm going to talk about my new hobby, making greeting cards out of discarded cardboard
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boxes.
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Now, why would I make a greeting card out of discarded cardboard?
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Well, for one thing, it does have been a lot cheaper than going to the convenience store
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or the local drugstore and buying a greeting card.
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Here in Canada, if I want to buy a greeting card made by one of the better companies,
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it's going to cost me at least $5.
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So it's a lot cheaper just to make them myself.
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Also, making a greeting card out of cardboard is quite creative.
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It gives me a creative outlet.
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I spend my work day helping people learn how to use computers.
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When I come in home and making a greeting card for a friend, making a birthday card,
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making a anniversary card, it gives me a creative outlet.
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Activates a different part of my brain.
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The third reason why I would suggest that you make greeting cards out of cardboard is
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because it's such a unique and personal gift.
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Every cardboard card that I make is unique because I use different parts of the box and
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every card looks different because of the cardboard that's used.
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Even if I use the same design over and over again, the cards end up looking different
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from each other.
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And people can tell that you've taken time to make a unique gift for them, and that's
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quite personal for them.
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Now what supplies would you need to get into this new hobby?
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Need a good box cutter, a good utility knife.
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Also I would start collecting cardboard boxes.
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To start with your first card, you'll need at least half of a cardboard box.
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It's great if you can get the boxes that are the size that you use for moving your possessions
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from one house to another, but I've discovered another kind of box that's great as well.
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At my workplace, we get shipped a lot of text books from Amazon, and the Amazon Shipping
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Boxes, many of them are a perfect size.
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I walk home from work and I can easily stick an Amazon Shipping Box used to ship two or
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three books to us.
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In my backpack, I just carry it home with me.
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It's a much easier size and much easier to work with.
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In addition to having a box cutter and some cardboard, you'd want some copy paper or
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light colored construction paper.
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What do you want is something that I'll contrast with the normal, bland color of the cardboard
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box, and we'll use this for writing the message in the card or on the card.
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So you're going to need a marker or a pen as well, or colored pencils or whatever you
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want to use, a stapler or glue, or both.
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The card I just made has stapled bits and glued bits to it.
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And you might want wrapping paper or some kind of textured paper, just to add some different
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elements to the card.
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I've got a three-step process for working on one of these greeting cards, made out of
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cardboard, and here's the first step.
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You take a look at the cardboard box that you're going to use, I'm going to assume that
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you're disassembled it and that it's flat, and you're going to look for the different
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folds that are in the cardboard box.
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Now cardboard boxes have two kinds of folds.
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The folds that is between two sides of a box is different, works differently than the
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fold between the side of the box and the flap.
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Most of the cardboard box that I've seen has a less resistant fold between the two sides
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of a box.
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Now the fold between the side of the box and the top or bottom flap of the box, that's
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going to have less give to it, it's going to be more resistant.
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What we're looking for is a fold that folds very easily, so that when you fold the two
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pieces together, it's almost closed, it doesn't give any resistance.
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Now if you're running low on cardboard and you have to use a piece of cardboard that
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involves the top or bottom flap of the box, you can still use it, you'll just have to
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work with it, maybe use a ruler to press against the fold, just make it a bit looser, make
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it less resistant.
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Or even if you have a piece of cardboard that doesn't have any fold, you can use a ruler
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to make a fold, you can just press the long side of a ruler against the cardboard and fold
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it up against the ruler.
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So the first thing that I would do is identify where the fold is or make a fold in the piece
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of cardboard that you're working with.
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Then you want to cut a piece of cardboard, that's about the size of a greeting card and
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you want to have that fold as part of it.
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So what I've written down here in the show notes is this instruction.
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Cut a piece of cardboard that is a size of a greeting card when folded in half along
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the existing fold.
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So when you're done this, you've got a piece of cardboard that's folded in half along
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that existing fold, it folds close quite easily.
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And there you go, that's going to be the base of your card.
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Now if you notice that you have old packing tape attached to the piece that you've cut
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out or if there's some strange cutouts or some additional strange folds, it doesn't
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matter.
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Any weirdness that you have as part of this cardboard piece, it just adds to the uniqueness
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of the greeting card.
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Okay, now we're at the third step and the most creative step.
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You've got your piece of folded cardboard and you can use this as a base on which to
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staple or glue other pieces.
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You can add wrapping paper and paste wrapping paper to this base that you're created.
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You can use construction paper.
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Anything you need to make a design on or in the greeting card.
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So I want to tell you about three cards that I've made within this last year and explain
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how I use this base.
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So I had a friend who had a birthday a few months ago.
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So I took the cardboard piece that we're using as the base for the card and I found some
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black construction paper and on the front of the card I made the silhouette of a city.
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So I used black construction paper to show the buildings and then I cut out pieces in
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that black construction paper and pasted some yellow construction paper behind it.
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So it looked like there were city lights on in these city buildings.
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And all that I stapled or pasted onto the cardboard piece that I cut out earlier.
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I also made an anniversary card for my parents that they're 30th anniversary recently and
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I used the method I talked about earlier to cut out the piece of cardboard that folds
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nicely into the size and shape of a greeting card.
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And then on the part that would have been the front of the card I cut out section so
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that it looked like the number 38 was on the card.
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So the front of the card is a big 3-8 joined together and when you open that up then
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you can see the inside of the card.
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A third card I made recently had a round cut out in the front of the card and through
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that round a hole you can see a yellow sunshine made out of construction paper.
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So there's all kinds of methods you can use to make a card that looks unique.
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I have a link for you.
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If you want to look at those three cards that I mentioned and the show notes you can
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go to a bitley site.
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If you go to bit.ly, 4chlash cardboard cards, bit.ly, 4chlash cardboard cards you'll
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see the information I just mentioned.
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Okay, that's it.
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I hope that this is good information for you and that this will help you make cheap
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cards that are creative and uniquely personal and I hope you have fun with this.
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Okay, that's all for now.
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Good bye.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio or Tacker Public Radio.
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We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday.
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Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself.
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If you ever consider recording a podcast, then visit our website to find out how easy
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it really is.
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Hacker Public Radio was founded by the digital dog pound and the infonomicum computer
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club.
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HBR is funded by the binary revolution at binref.com.
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All binref projects are proudly sponsored by Lina Pages.
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From shared hosting to custom private clouds, go to LinaPages.com for all your hosting
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needs.
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Unless otherwise stasis, today's show is released under a creative commons, attribution,
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share a line, free dose of license.
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