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Card stock



 
 
Card stock (also called cover stock or pasteboard) is a paper stock that is thicker and more durable than normal writing or printing paper, but thinner and more flexible than other forms of paperboard
Paperboard

Paperboard is a paper-like material, usually over ten mils in thickness. Some types of paperboard are used in the construction of Corrugated fiberboard....
. Card stock is often used for postcard
Postcard

A postcard or post card is a rectangular piece of thick paper or thin Card stock intended for writing and mailing without an envelope and at a lower rate than a letter ....
s, playing cards, catalog covers, scrapbooking
Scrapbooking

"Scrapbook" redirects here. For the Mac OS application see Scrapbook . For the Switchblade Symphony album, see Scrapbook . For the film, see Scrapbook ....
, and other uses which require higher durability than regular paper. The texture is usually smooth, but can be textured, metallic, or glossy.

Card stock thickness is often described by pound weight.






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Card stock (also called cover stock or pasteboard) is a paper stock that is thicker and more durable than normal writing or printing paper, but thinner and more flexible than other forms of paperboard
Paperboard

Paperboard is a paper-like material, usually over ten mils in thickness. Some types of paperboard are used in the construction of Corrugated fiberboard....
. Card stock is often used for postcard
Postcard

A postcard or post card is a rectangular piece of thick paper or thin Card stock intended for writing and mailing without an envelope and at a lower rate than a letter ....
s, playing cards, catalog covers, scrapbooking
Scrapbooking

"Scrapbook" redirects here. For the Mac OS application see Scrapbook . For the Switchblade Symphony album, see Scrapbook . For the film, see Scrapbook ....
, and other uses which require higher durability than regular paper. The texture is usually smooth, but can be textured, metallic, or glossy.

Card stock thickness is often described by pound weight. Pound weight is the weight of 500, 20" by 26" sheets. This differs from how text stock is determined, which assumes 500, 25" by 38" sheets. Most countries use the term grammage to describe the weight of the paper in grams per square meter. The term card stock is used to describe paper with weights from 50lb to 110lb (about 175 to 400 g/mē).

In the US, card stock thickness is usually measured in points or mils that gives the thickness of the sheet in thousandths of an inch. For example, a 10 pt. card is thick (roughly corresponding to a weight of 250 g/m2); 12 pt. is 0.012".