3 Simple Ways to
Share What You Make

With Instructables you can share what you make with the world — and tap into an ever-growing community of creative experts.

PhotosPhotos

Share one or more photos of a project, recipe, or whatever you've made, quickly and easily.

Step by StepStep-By-Step

Share your step-by-step photos with text instructions of what you made so others can do it too!

VideoVideo

Share your how-to video. You'll need your embed code from a video site such as YouTube.

DIY Scratch Off Business Cards

DIY Scratch Off Business Cards


Make your own scratch offs just like you find on lotto tickets. All it takes is a little planning, some clever screen printing, and a steady hand.

I love creating unique business cards . I've made them into flat pack vampire kits and used DIY embossing techniques . Not so long ago a friend of mine asked for some to promote his company Instinct Engineering . He'd just finished doing the engineering behind this massive awesome steampunk sculpture called the Raygun Gothic Rocket and wanted some cards showcasing it. I decided that it would be cool if you could scratch away the design plans to reveal the finished sculpture beneath.

At first I thought that it would be a pretty simple job, just assemble everything in Photoshop and hand it off to a printer. After getting quotes back from a few places (some over $1300) I was a bit flustered. I'd promised to make the project happen but couldn't believe how expensive it was to print. Then, I did a little research online. I found this project which gave me the idea: why not create my own scratch off ink and screenprint the cards myself? Then I could stamp them with the drawing on top and get them cut. By doing so much of the labor myself I could save my friend a mint in printing fees. Sufficed it was more work than I'd bargained for and ended up biting my teeth for a month waiting on printers, screenprinting, getting orders waylaid, and generally being tossed about on the choppy waters of fate but in the end I came up with some fantastic, beautiful, and pretty professional looking scratch cards.
 
Remove these adsRemove these ads by Signing Up
 

Step 1Design, Assemble, And Print

Design, Assemble, And Print
I chose to do a pretty complex project, here, with all the aligning, cutting, stamping, screening and everything needing to work out so precisely to make the cards work. It was a bit extreme and in retrospect I wish I'd allowed more room for error but the principle is pretty simple. You assemble your design in photoshop, creating separate layers for each of the elements. I made sure to add crop marks to my page so things could be aligned at Kinko's for cutting.

I saved the design for the front and back of the cards as high resolution jpegs. I sent those off to the printer to get printed on cardstock. I made a transparency for the scratch off design to get made into a screen (you can find out more about the process here).

When I first sent the design off to the printer's they messed up a bit of my order. The design got printed on plain paper instead of cardstock. After getting a refund I added all of my order information (4 color printing, front and back, cardstock, my name, my phone number) in the margins of the print to make sure they couldn't mess it up. I've had mixed luck with printing so make sure you are really specific about what you're ordering and be sure to call and make sure they get your order exactly right.
« Previous StepDownload PDFView All StepsNext Step »
27 comments
Nov 28, 2011. 6:32 PMshortone says:
http://www.instructables.com/id/Gifts-For-Guys/

Put you in my gift guide for guys! Just thought I'd let you know :)
Nov 14, 2010. 12:10 PMbd5 says:
Okay, you win. I do believe this is my all time favorite Instructable I've ever seen!
Jul 27, 2010. 3:23 AMsaronpaz says:
just a short question, if i need to use a large quantity of scratch off paint. is it ok to use any water soluble paint or just the block printing ink ? i imagine that its quite expensive no ? is there a cheaper version you know of ? thanks a lot s
Apr 27, 2010. 7:52 PMDephect says:
Nice! I camped at 7:30 and Adapt and I had front row seats to the rocket show.
Apr 15, 2010. 7:39 PMcircuitfish says:
You just answered my question of what to do for the business cards I need for my upcoming thesis project.
Mar 19, 2010. 9:02 PMAngeRosser says:
Wow!  I love these.
Mar 7, 2010. 5:07 AMQueenQuill says:
 Oooh...was the picture on the business card taken at Burning Man?  Looks like Playa in the background...xD
Mar 11, 2010. 1:46 PMReverend Sysyphus says:
Yeah, that rocket was from Burning Man '09, I was there.  I went into the thing and it was awesome!  The night before the burn it "took off" in a huge fireworks show.  I took a great picture of it with my near-infrared camera rig that came out cool.  I hope the artist brings it back this year as I will be going again.
Mar 11, 2010. 1:14 PMmdeblasi1 says:
If it was myself that your comment was for. . . I was in newyork somewhere between Little Italy & Soho.  I had the picture taken not only because it was good graffiti, but the sign she is holding "The End Is Not Near."  Pleased me to no end.
Mar 11, 2010. 1:23 PMvitex says:
 It's been said before, but well done. Outstanding 'ible.  <bows>  The scratchie idea adds an interesting psychological twist to the classic business card, and no-one is ever going to forget one of these.  I think I might just investigate this for my own bc......
Mar 11, 2010. 1:19 PMmsd8 says:
 Great 'ibble man, the cards look awesome!

Just a thought for stamping them in step 4...

I noticed you used had multiple single stamps pictured, glued to small pieces of wood. 

If you're stamping entire sheets of the business cards, why not glue a grid of the stamps to a large piece of wood, and that way you can ink up like 12 stamps at once using a larger roller, and print an entire sheet at a time.... That way you only have to register the page to the plate, rather than each individual stamp... i imagine it would be considerably faster too...? 

Anyways just a thought...

Really great looking product man, wish I had the money and an excuse to give ya some work... lol.. 
Mar 11, 2010. 11:31 AMquinn says:
Absolutely brilliant! 

Question:  What kind of dish detergent?  Just a liquid dish soap like Palmolive or Dawn?
Mar 11, 2010. 10:43 AMbsantaana says:
I'm usually a lazy butt but this one is worth getting up for. It is an inspiring 'Ible...
Inspir-Ible!
Thank you for sharing your knowledge. I'm sure your hard work and generosity will earn you many karma points.
Mar 11, 2010. 9:24 AMbethehammer says:
This is awesome.... just thinking that this technique could make some cool party invitations or greeting cards!
Mar 7, 2010. 9:35 AMmdeblasi1 says:
This is a fine and fabulous creation.  May I suggest a parts list at the beginning of the entry? 
Sincerely,
Marya
Mar 6, 2010. 6:20 PMluvit says:
 with your business, everyone is a winner. kinda.
Mar 6, 2010. 3:13 PMLintballoon says:

Awesome cool! And what a good friend you are for doing all that.

Mar 6, 2010. 12:43 PMNinzerbean says:
 Wow, I gave you 5 stars by the time I got to step #2!
Mar 5, 2010. 11:34 PMT3h_Muffinator says:
Whoa!  Incredible!  Fantastic!  Awesome work! (including the time lapse and high-quality instructable)

I suppose I haven't been constructive in a while (in terms of adding to instructables), this makes me want to make things!  (really awesome easily-distributed things like business cards and give-aways, but things in general)

How come you decided to stamp the rocket instead of screen print it over the scratch-off ink?
Mar 5, 2010. 6:05 PMWard_Nox says:
i thought the scratch off on lotto tickets was Silicon
Mar 5, 2010. 5:48 PMlove em geeks says:
A W E S O M E !
Mar 5, 2010. 5:34 PMkcls says:
Could this be implemented to make your own fake instant win lottery tickets, like, for a prank? That would be cool! Great 'ible!
Mar 5, 2010. 4:58 PMcanida says:
Wow, those are sweet!  And I'm going to find an excuse to use that scratch-off ink recipe soon.  Not quite sure how yet...
Mar 5, 2010. 3:00 PMlukaj2003 says:
Wow, what a hell of an effort you made!
Those business cards look awesome!

Pro

Get More Out of Instructables

Already have an Account?

close

All Steps Viewing
View all steps of an Instructable on the same page when you're a Pro Member.

Upgrade to Pro today!
111
Followers
18
Author:bofthem(HAR.MS)
I'm M@. If you know Prototype This, TechShop, The Best of Instructables, Show Me How, or AVPII: Requiem, you've seen some of my work and the cool stuff I've been involved in. I build and design and ma...
more »