Best craft hardboards according to redditors

We found 6 Reddit comments discussing the best craft hardboards. We ranked the 5 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Top Reddit comments about Craft Hardboard:

u/paraakrama · 4 pointsr/Mommit

It depends on what your child prefers. My daughter (3) likes to work with her hands more than she enjoys imaginative play, so her xmas list has things like Playdough, play foam, laces toy, puzzles, drawing things or accessories like stamps and stickers, etc.

She's not really into plush toys, dolls, or cars - anything that isn't something she can actually DO.

u/ZombieButch · 3 pointsr/learnart

> Do I have to use solvent to get fine details?

You want to use a medium. You can use just a solvent - either odorless mineral spirits or pure turpentine - but only for a first, thin layer, like if you're using paint to draw in your scene or block in big areas of color or value as an underpainting. This has the advantage of drying very quickly but will also be very matte and dull; using solvent alone breaks up the oil so you don't get a good paint film on the dried surface.

A basic medium you can use for subsequent layers is half oil - linseed oil is the standard, and is the same stuff that's probably in your paints, but walnut oil also works and dries a bit more slowly than linseed - and half solvent. But there are a lot of other mediums out there; Liquin from Windsor-Newton or Galkyd from Gamblin (they're both basically the same thing, just different brands) are good all-around mediums.

There's a lot of different mediums out there that do different things, and you can experiment with them as you get more experienced, but any of those I mentioned are perfectly good and a lot of artists go their whole careers only ever using just one of those.

Edit: Also, read this short article on the basic rules for layering your paints; it's essential knowledge if you're going to be using oil paints.

You can also totally oil paint on pretty much any surface if you're just practicing or doing little quick studies, but you can pick up big packs of canvas panels pretty inexpensively on Amazon. The five paintings pinned above my drying shelf here are on either cardboard or bristol board that I glued down to cardboard (basically homemade illustration board); the ones at the bottom actually leaning are in-progress pieces on canvas panels. I also picked up some hardboard panels to work on, and they're not much more expensive than the canvas ones.

u/4_jacks · 1 pointr/cars

Holy loving hell, what was that guy thinking.

Dirt cheap - cut a piece of fiberboard to exactly fit that area. Use spray adhesive to put some Dark Grey Felt on the fiberboard. I would not try to color match the leather. Dark grey will look like an intentional accent. Light grey that is slightly off will look much worse.

u/BenCuy · 1 pointr/3Dprinting

Thanks now I can Reddit good.

What you could do Is use mdf (that stuff clip boards are made of) and drill holes into it. You could even use a 2d printer to print a template out. Mdf is a lot easier to work with than plexiglass.

You can find some here