Thanks, some people say to just buy new sleeves but when you have limited edition japanese imported sleeves that a friend gifted you, you cant just buy new ones.
@@butteye7951 I’m going to guess no, and point you towards looking up the dimensions for what a typical outer sleeve might be then compare that to what you are asking
I recommend just using a splash of rubbing alcohol. It dries out a lot faster than straight water and I don't really think it will damage card sleeves at all.
So I Tried doing this and I timed myself with a microfiber cloth to see if it would be worth the time because it takes a long time to clean one sleeve, It took about 1- 1.5 mins to clean one single sleeve having to sleeve 55-75 cards would take over an hour to finish. And after playing with them for a day they became just as dirty again. IMO this method wasnt worth it but If your trying to save a couple of cents and have an hour and a half of free time id recommend this. other than that just buy a pack of sleeves for 5-7$. easiest tho to buy a display case of 10 packs of sleeves so youd be good for about 3-4 months
@@deniomshadow6486 So the sleeves were bad because I was using this method about every week for 1 month, and after about 3-4 weeks it just took awhile to wipe away all the dirty patches. Realistically its probably 30 secs each. but after a month id suggest buying new ones.
and also a thing i didnt bring up is the ability to shuffle when you have new sleeves vs cleaned up sleaves they wont have that same shuffle feel if their older but still cleaned. I think it works for a bit tho.
I just wanna reduce plastic waste :v I am unsure if isopropyl alcohol would be a good idea as too much exposure would cause problems. I am just a naturally oily mfer. Also, microfiber rags are cheap now.