Paper Cuttlebug
Paper Cuttlebug

I have got a cuttlebug machine and it is brilliant but?
i find it very annoying that you can only use small bits of card/paper. I want a machine that can take an A4 piece in, can anyone point me in the right direction? Is the Sizzix Big shot one that takes a4 size?
thanks
No the Big Shot doesn't take A4. You would need to buy one of the machines that can be hooked up to your computer. Quickutz Silhouette - the latest model has an SD card you can preload with shapes so you can carry it around and use it without the computer. Craft Robo is another make.
These machines are more expensive but much more versatile. You can cut any font (typestyle) on your computer in any size. Cut a word with the letters joined together, cut any clip art or scanned image and you don't have to buy dies or cartridges so the only further expense is replacement blades.
Paper Cuttlebug
Paper Pleasing ~ Embossing with Nestabilities and Cuttlebug
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Paper $4.84 Paper |
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Paper It! $14.15 Paper It! |
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PAPER STARS: PAPER STARS $10.36 PAPER STARS: PAPER STARS |
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PAPER SCISSORS: PAPER SCISSORS $13.96 PAPER SCISSORS: PAPER SCISSORS |
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Paper Dolls And Paper Airplanes $29.83 Paper Dolls And Paper Airplanes |
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PAPER BULLETS: PAPER BULLETS $15.09 PAPER BULLETS: PAPER BULLETS |
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The Paper $10.44 Director Ron Howard's drama follows a beleaguered reporter during a hectic 24 hours at a New York City tabloid. Michael Keaton stars as Henry Hackett, a metro editor for the struggling New York Sun. Hackett is being wooed by the Sentinel, a more upscale paper, but he's addicted to the adrenaline-stimulating, breakneck pace of the Sun's newsroom, much to the consternation of his pregnant wife Martha (Marisa Tomei. Hackett is currently pursuing a story of two minority youths who have been arrested for the murders of two men. He learns that the police think that the killings may be a mob hit. In the court of public opinion, however, the innocent suspects are being judged as guilty, and the police may bow to the pressure. As Hackett and his staff desperately work all the story's angles to find the truth, several other dramas unfold. Top editor Bernie (Robert Duvall) learns that he has prostate cancer, and tough publisher Alicia (Glenn Close) wonders if her lack of popularity is due to her cost-cutting, her personality, or the fact that she's a woman. In their only collaboration, screenwriter David Koepp co-wrote the script with his brother Stephen Koepp, a senior editor at Time magazine. ~ Karl Williams, Rovi |
Paper Cuttlebug