Aloha Matt,
They still make braillables which are those sticky backed sheets, but 
when the backing is removed, they aren't as durable as the thin 
thermoform paper. However, I do have some heavy clear plastic 
material that I use to make covers for the documents that my company 
produces. I buy them from a company called
Southwest Plastics, but if all you want is 25 or so of them, I have 
some that have 1 line of braille on them that were errors. They 
measure 8-1/2 by 11, or 9 by 11.
They are all 19 hole punched along one long side. I use a paper 
cutter to make 3 by 5 and 4 by 6 cards for addresses and the like 
that I really want to keep, but I have more than I need.
I use a good-old-fashioned braille writer to braille them.
Betsy

At 04:14 AM 10/7/2009, you wrote:
>
>What is out there which we can stick in an old perkin's brailler and 
>achieve a tough, durable copy of something?
>I was thinking of brailling out measurements and stuff for things I 
>make and storing them out in my shop to refer too?
>Thermoform paper rips too easy for my liking.
>Do they still have the old sticky plastic paper, which used to come 
>in sheets with plastic backing?
>Where can I get something good which will last?
>
>Thanks,
>
>Matt
>
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