OldCat wrote:ssokolow wrote:Used some leftover scraps I'd saved from building my SNES/PSP game shelf
Pray, do tell. Or do show, rather.
As requested. Sorry about the little bit of perspective distortion. I couldn't find a satisfying-looking correction, so I left it raw.
The attachment IMG_20180907_142216_corrected.jpg is no longer available
The shelf is built using the remains of some kind of broken IKEA furniture that a family friend was going to throw out otherwise. (I also built several others from said remains. I think it might have been some kind of bed frame.)
The labels on both the floppies and the stacking boxes are done using the same "plain paper + glue roller" technique I described for making index cards into nice shelf dividers.
The top three rows of the wall shelf are sized for SNES cartridges. The next one down is sized for PSP keep cases. Then, below that, two rows sized to fit either my tallest floppy boxes or N64 and Sega Genesis carts. (For shelves that I didn't build to be adjustable, I like to leave myself options.)
The SNES carts are stored label-left (in plastic so I can handle them without feeling worried about the labels) because Nintendo invariably puts the backup battery in the top-right corner of the cartridge when viewed from the front (confirmed on my entire collection of GB, GBC, GBA, SNES, and N64 carts) so, if I drop the ball on battery inspection and replacement and they leak, the electrolyte will attack nothing but the battery traces before it flows off the PCB and onto the inside of the shell. (The one caveat being the handful of SRAM-based GBA carts with batteries, where the battery straddles a surface-mount IC to save space.)
On the PSP row, I bought "Capcom Classics Collection Remixed", "Lumines", and "Ratchet & Clank: Size Matters" as loose UMDs for $2-5 CA each at the local pawn shop or used games store, then I spent 20¢ each on empty PSP cases and printed inserts for them.
In the case of the Capcom Classics Collection Remixed, I had to reinvent the spine portion of the label since The Cover Project didn't have a complete, print-ready insert. I got lazy there and, one of these days, if I have nothing better to do, it'd be nice to track down the actual fonts Capcom used and redo it. Likewise with the Ratchet & Clank insert, which was printed on an inkjet that was running out of black ink and doesn't have the inner art properly aligned, since I have little experience with double-sided printing.
As for the bottom rows, those aren't all of my 3.5" floppies, but the other cardboard-boxed ones are on a different shelf, next to my Gameboy and Gameboy Color games. (Speaking of which, I should probably tidy up and share the template I cooked up for making labels that fit those Gameboy clamshells using Inkscape and some digital calipers.)
I know I'm missing some floppies, since I no longer have my childhood copies of Treasure Mountain and Ducktales: The Quest for Gold, and my set of OS/2 1.20 floppies is incomplete.