Handfield book
Lynn Scott
lynnscott at heiconsulting.com
Wed May 29 02:52:39 EDT 2002
The simple solution I adopted was to buy a box of clear standard-weight
page protectors, or sheet protectors (Xerox and other companies manufacture
them from a plastic material that does not lift ink off documents)
available in any reasonable office-supply store and not overly
expensive. Each plate from Handfield was put in its own protector, and the
whole set put in a binder (the page protectors come three-hole punched),
which lives with the book. This arrangement shows no wear after a year and
a half of heavy use, and as time goes by, I periodically insert a picture
I've printed off the web or a new reference photo that someone has sent me,
as a facing page for easy comparison with Handfield's plates. The binder
stays conveniently flat when I have it open where I'm working, and the
pages are easy to turn when I'm looking for something I'm trying to identify.
Lynn Scott
At 01:42 AM 5/29/2002, Robert P. Dana wrote:
>Now for something completely different . . . has anyone come up with a
>good solution for the problem of the unbound plates in L. Handfield's
>Papillons du Quebec?
>
>Robert Dana
>--
>
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