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Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Custom Wooden Nickels, Poker Chips & More!

This is one of those fun projects in which the possibilities are endless! Transferring images onto little round discs. I had planned on simply making some custom wooden nickels from craft-store wood discs, until I happened upon a vintage box of plastic poker chips with nice smooth surfaces.
You can also customize Scrabble tiles and all kinds of other objects for cool and unique tokens, pendants, keychains, and more, yeah- even fabric! In vintage style, I designed my wooden nickels in black and white. You can also go full color!
Besides the wooden discs, chips, or other pieces you’ll be transferring to , the two key materials for the success of this project are:
1. A Chartpak Blender Pen, found in most art supply stores or online HERE
2. Laser-jet prints or photocopies (must be powder ink, not wet ink.) I had to drive to the copy store for my copies as I only have an ink-jet printer. BE SURE TO FLOP YOUR IMAGE! (mirror image of your artwork.) When creating my designs, I added a faint circle border the same size as the discs I would be transferring to for a positioning guide.
I purchased 1-1/2" wooden circle discs at the craft store, and the same size poker chips at the thrift store.
I had photocopies made of my own designs and cut them apart. I added a top center mark on each for 2-sided positioning so the art lined up somewhat front to back.
Line up the disc to the positioning circle and tape to the paper in a couple of places. This helps keep the art from shifting when transferring.
Turn the disk and paper over and with the blender pen, simply stroke across the back of the paper. Once is usually enough, too much and you can turn your image to mush.
Remove the paper and repeat the steps for the other side, lining up the top center (or bottom, which ever you prefer.) Again, stroke over the paper with the marker.
For another fun effect, you can stack up some of your discs or poker chips and stripe the sides.
These nickels are great for little give-away promotions, tokens of appreciation, birth announcements, even allowance tokens (I never have cash on hand at the end of the week.) Drill a hole and use as a pendant or keychain. Make a lucky poker chip token for your favorite online poker enthusiast. Make some Pay-It-Forward coins to share.
Just for fun, I made some extra wooden nickel images that you can customize yourself.
For the PDF Digital Download, click HERE.
For the flopped PDF file, you can click HERE.

48 comments:

Patty said...

These are adorable ! You come up with such cute ideas ! Thanks : )

Linda said...

How fun...thanks for sharing these!

Hena Tayeb said...

great idea.

The Dragonfly said...

Seriously Cathe, is there no end to your genius? These are so great and I'm having a baby on Thursday, so might just have to make this a last minute project to hand out to my family at the hospital. Love it!

Whitney@ Whisker Graphics said...

Cathe, Cathe, Cathe... Do you ever get tired of being a super, uber, creative genius??!! This is a great project and I love the graphics you supplied. My kids would would hurt themselves with the biggest eye-roll ever if I paid them with "Weekly Allowance" wooden nickels. I think I might just have to try it! How handy would these be for "being good" rewards or potty training? You are just too cool! Thanks!!

Rima said...

How cool is that!

Rima
www.yarnydays.com

Rosy Revolver said...

I collect vintage poker chips and LOVE this idea! I drill mine (the old clay ones take the drill beautifully) and use them as Christmas ornaments, jewelry, and lately as an embellishment to my packaging. In fact I just did a blog post on them last Monday! So glad to see someone shares in the love of pokerchips!!

Karen said...

I love these! Thanks for your generosity in teaching us how to do it. I have a question. Do you have a blank of just circles or is there a template of just circles available? Thanks, Karen

Cathe Holden said...

Hi Karen, If you download the PDF file, the circles are grouped together. You can copy and paste them to a new file.

Hope that helps!

WW said...

These are just wonderful. I can see endless uses!!
Thank You!

the undomesticated wife said...

You could even make 2 sets and use them instead of standard checkers!

Janet said...

You could make some round TUITs!

Then, the next time someone says they will do something when they get "around to it", hand them one!

Lynette said...

You don't know how excited I am to see this tutorial. My family geocaches, and we have been trying to BUY some of these for our souvenir to leave in caches!!! Thanks so much!

Karen said...

Thanks for sharing, I'll go try that! Karen

Faded Plains said...

Amazing! You know...I think I write that for every comment...but it's so true!

The Redhead Riter said...

That is such a cute idea!

I love it! I'm going to have to try it too.

TidyMom said...

Cute Cute!! - Seriously, do you ever stop? you're ideas are ALWAYS so unique!!!

~TidyMom

Molly said...

Another fabulous idea!!!!

Hope you don't mind, I posted a link to this wonderful tutorial from my own blog: http://mollyleecards.blogspot.com/

http://mollyleecards.blogspot.com/2009/07/dont-take-any-wooden-nickels.html

Thanks for all you do! You're awesome!

Molly

Dana Gustafson said...

Be still my crafty heart! These are so wonderful! Thank you for the beautiful download too! You are always thinking of soemthing cool!

Debra said...

Found this blog through a "smub.it" link shared by Crafty Pod. Wonderful project. Gorgeous art.

now to spend some time getting to know you better.

Lovely said...

This is a great tute. Thanks! I'm definitely going to give it a try.

Does that pen work to transfer to canvas - stretching painter's canvas?

Pearlie Mae said...

I think you can also use rubbing alcohol and a cotton swab to transfer if you can't find a blending pen.

Nice Tutorial!

Ady Grafovna said...

I am going to try this too! Great tutorial! It is such a cool idea!

della stella said...

WOW! Wish I had seen this before my wedding... these would be so cute as 'pick-a-charity' favors. :)

Lori said...

Amazing! Thanks so much for sharing!!

Pamela said...

What a cute, cute, cute idea. I love coming to your site and seeing all the great stuff you have in your little brain.

Suzanne in TX said...

These are fantastic! Are the blank wooden coins from the hobby store just as nice and thick as the poker chips? I'm thinking they would be fun with little magnets added to the back. I love sending something like this with orders for my dog collars. OMG--I could make dog tags--of course the dog might chew it up! Lots of ideas in my head already. Thanks for sharing and for the templates.
FYI: I found you via Craft Magazine's daily email.

Unknown said...

CATHE! You got posted in Craft's blog! You should be so proud :D

Anonymous said...

If I want a color image, would using a color laser printer work as well as the black and white?

How durable are the prints - do they rub off easily?

Unknown said...

Thanks for sharing this great idea with the crafting community. There will be a special place reserved for you in craft heaven.

Unknown said...

Thanks for sharing this great idea with the crafting community. There will be a special place reserved for you in craft heaven.

Cathe Holden said...

Anonymous,

After finding success with the black and white image, I ran out and had color prints made. I'm not having as good of luck with those. It could very well be the toner used, I think I will try getting prints from a different copy shop to find out. I will definately post about it when I do.

Thanks everyone, for the fantastic response. Hello to all you BoardGamers that are visiting! Welcome!

youngmi said...

fun! can't wait to give it a try :) thanks for always being so generous and sharing all your great ideas.

Rachel@oneprettything.com said...

YAY! This is going to make the best gift for a friend of mine-it's so, so, SO perfect! Thanks so much for sharing, I'll be linking.

Unknown said...

Dear Cathe,

thanx for sharing!

I was so excited about these & wanted to make some coffee-coins immediately. I couldn't get the original blender pen (no shipping to Germany), but I got another one. Unfortunately it didn't work at all. So I tried a nail-polish-remover-pen and got very pale results. The best results (but still nonsatisfying) I got with turpentine...

Any idea anyone?

gilstrapdesigns said...

I like those I'll have to try these.

Angela Silva said...

Safety warning: the ingredient in the Chartpak blender pen that transfers the toner ink in the photocopy is xylene. This is a toxic solvent so please do this in a well-ventilated place. It's not good for your lungs.

Unknown said...

what a great idea...make great tags for gifts too! thanks...

Tammy in Ontario, Canada said...

Thanks for this idea, love it! I am looking forward to trying this some day and thanks for the link of where to purchase the pen.

dawt said...

I stumbled on one of THE best finds, ever! I found an old game called "Bottle Tops" by Parker Brothers that's full of these little gems. AN-DUH! The best part? It was only one dollar! Thank you for such a genius idea, I can't wait to get my craft on!

Unknown said...

Thank you for a wonderful post.
These will make great money chips for the games I and my friends play.

I may want to color the chips to quickly tell what the denomination is. Will the transferred image hold up to highlighters or staining?

Tasajara said...

I found this site that has less expensive pen cost and shipping:

http://www.utrechtart.com/dsp_view_product.cfm?item=60650

Lenetta said...

This concept fascinated me! I linked to it on my weekly link roundup (post can be found here). Thanks!!

Anonymous said...

I so love this idea. Thanks for the clip art. I can not wait to try this out.

Sandi
Impatient Cajun

Scott said...

I tried this out, and found that I was having limited success with the transfer coming out clearly. Maybe only one in 4 attempts were working out for me, and I'm not really sure what I'm doing wrong. I'd like to make it work, but I don't know where to start. Can anyone help?

Jeff in Calgary said...

I tired this with a PRISMACOLOR brand blender. Didn't work. Is it my blender, or maybe something else (yes I did use a lazer printer (HP toner cartrige 12A))

Cathe Holden said...

This post has been up for quite a while, long enough for it to find its way onto many forums with the biggest issue coming out of all of it being the toner/marker issue. You have to use a Chartpak marker. There are recipes of chemicals you can make yourself apparently, but it all comes down to Chartpak. (And powdered toner, vs. ink.)

Hope that helps!

Anonymous said...

C'est une très bonne idée . J'ai du mal a traduire en français, mais avec les photos je vais réussir.
Merci de nous faire partager tes idées et la planche de cercles.
c'est quoi un chartpack ?
A bientôt je reviendrais sur ton site
claudine