I use this stuff for the small planes...
http://www.seetemp.com/order.htm
--
Dan D.
http://www.ameritech.net/users/ddevillers/start.html
..
"Ryan Young"  wrote in message   om...
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 Got a call the other night from a total stranger .... He's trying to track down some tracing paper.
 http://www.artsupply.com/alvin/tracing.htm
 Architects use it by the running yard, at least those of the old
 school.  Sometimes it's easier to think with a pencil than with a CAD
 program when doing preliminary sketches.
   Waxed
 paper makes great tracing paper but nowadays most folks don't carry those
 narrow-lead wax pencils you need to write on the stuff.
 Usually referred to these days as "Film pencils" or "Mylar pencils".
 Try colored leads for a mechanical pencil.  You trace on the less waxy
 side.
 Truth is, I haven't used real tracing paper since the late 1950's when it was
 replaced by frosted acetate and later by frosted Mylar.
 Mylar gets a bit spendy, and Acetate is worse.  The non-frosted stuff
 can be marked with a Sharpie.  The frosted stuff (a starch coating
 gets put on it) can take pencil or pen.
 http://www.artsuppliesonline.com/cat...m?cata_id=4984
 Another way to transfer plans is to use Dressmakers Carbon and a
 tracing wheel.  Transfer directly onto whatever you're going to use,
 either for a pattern, a jig, or a part.