Perhaps some thin card would do the job?
If so then the sheets could be made into a pad by putting a stack on some
plain paper (to catch the drips) and placing a weight (a clean brick used
to work well!) and painting one side of the stack with Copydex adhesive.
(it has to be this kind of "rubber substitute" glue rather than PVA or
plastic cement)
When it has dried properly - takes longer han usual - it can be split into
useable sized pads with a thin knife blade. This is essentially what the
paper pad makers do but using available materials.
Jeff
In your message regarding low-tech solution dated Tue, 14 Dec 2004 10:49:20
-0000, Catriona Mowat said that ...
> Hi,
>
> Can anyone help with this one?
>
> Do you know of a company which produces thick sheet A4 notepads, which
> could be used by a student to make some limited lecture notes using a black
> felt-tip marker, where the ink would not run through the page?
>
> Or, is there such a thing as a felt-tip pen where the ink would not run
> through a standard sheet of notepaper?
>
> To give an indication of the size of the pen nib required, when reading
> printed materials this student would normally use a size 20 bold font.
>
> Any ideas??
>
> Thanks
>
> Catriona
> Catriona Mowat
> Disability Adviser
> Student Information & Support Service
> University of Stirling
> Stirling
> FK9 4LA
> Tel: (01786) 467080
> Fax: (01786) 466806
>
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>>>>>
===============================================
Jeff Hughes, Chartered Educational Psychologist
Special Needs Computing/Hughes & Co, Box42 Ltd
Email: [log in to unmask] Web: http://www.box42.com
===============================================
>>>>>
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