I heard back from the project creator. Here's what he said.
Hi Don. Thanks for your comments. Oddly enough, I've had a few chats over the months with a friend of mine about playing card cases and such. I myself am fairly ignorant about the discipline, but he is wildly interested in such a thing. It sounds like a few more conversations are warranted.
Thanks for the heads up re: theory11. We're in the midst of a rebrand, and the round logo in the photos is indeed our old one.
We'll keep you informed if we come up with any solutions for a dedicated card-case.
Cheers,
NateSo there you go - he's looking into it.
I've seen those a few days ago, and I think they are amazingly designed wallets. However, from the get-go, they appear too small and/or tight to fit a deck even though the beginning dimensions are good. I'll have to see what the creator says, but all essence, they look pretty dope.
But you're neglecting one detail - the tightness is variable based on whatever O-rings you settle on. You can even replace the existing O-rings with sizes of your own - they're cheap and have many other uses. You could make a portable deck press that could hold two, three or even more decks.
The A1 plate (A0 in the picture I showed you) is the perfect size - almost too perfect - for covering a deck. Poker-sized decks are 3.5 inches by 2.5 inches and bridge size is the same except for being 0.25 inches more narrow. I'd probably want a plate that's a tiny bit bigger, just to give better edge protection, but the Euro plate set might be too big and the Passport set definitely is.
It sounds like dee1orean is checking out the Euro model anyway to see if it's a practical set. Hopefully it is. I'm keen on getting this stuff as well, to use as a wallet, and possibly their multi-purpose tool from their website.
Nope. Not at 42$ for the smallest one that will fit a deck. (the A2 could possibly fit a deck, but no size is actually designed for a deck.)
Plus, less is more. I like being able to just slip my deck into a clip, not having to screw around with a bunch of rubber bands.
I am open to new ideas, though.
Did you watch the video? The concept is that one rubber band stays in place to provide a hinge function while the other is designed to roll down along the edges as you open the plates and extract the contents, which you then manually roll back into place. It's not as quick and simple as a deck clip, but it is still quick and simple, and provides better pressure evenly over the entire surface of the deck while a clip really only applies pressure along the line where the clip mouth makes contact with the deck. I see it as a very elegant solution to making a portable deck press that's simple and easy to use and carry.