I have nearly 3000 CDs and choosing this storage system has saved a ton of space. I have organized the collection by genres and alphabetically by artists, since the spines are not exposed anymore. I have tried a great deal of different sleeves from all over the world, but none has reached the usablility of Slim Disc system. It is fairly steep, but the quality is second to none.
I ended up finding this company after becoming exasperated by the absurd fact that *no one* was making a product that housed the rear insert (what do they think people are going to do - just throw them away?!) and scouring the internet for a solution. I had been intent on finding a binder-type, but this is a far better system, as organising them in your preferred way doesn't mean rearranging everything every time you want to accommodate a new title.
spacesavingsleeves.com are doing sleeves that keep the rear insert in as well. I used them before and they’re great but went for slim-disc this time because they’re based in the UK.
Noticing this video being published only earlier this year, I'd say now's the time to start diversifying the business (if you're not doing so already), what with the huge move from physical to digital media... Don't get me wrong, it's a great idea and looks very useful for those in this situation, but this is getting more and more obsolete with each year that passes.
Physical format is mass produced with literally millions of titles and millions of collectors. Like vinyl there are many reasons people will still buy physical, after all the kindle never stopped people buying books. DVDs and CDs are still mass produced and will continue. MP3s sound crap period.
I have nearly 3000 CDs and choosing this storage system has saved a ton of space. I have organized the collection by genres and alphabetically by artists, since the spines are not exposed anymore.
I have tried a great deal of different sleeves from all over the world, but none has reached the usablility of Slim Disc system. It is fairly steep, but the quality is second to none.
I ended up finding this company after becoming exasperated by the absurd fact that *no one* was making a product that housed the rear insert (what do they think people are going to do - just throw them away?!) and scouring the internet for a solution. I had been intent on finding a binder-type, but this is a far better system, as organising them in your preferred way doesn't mean rearranging everything every time you want to accommodate a new title.
spacesavingsleeves.com are doing sleeves that keep the rear insert in as well. I used them before and they’re great but went for slim-disc this time because they’re based in the UK.
Will these fit my Dreamcast collection as I have a lot of shmups and I would love to keep the beautiful artwork.
I believe booklets and inserts for Dreamcast Titles fit in standard CD Jewel cases therefore they should fit in these sleeves as well.
@@eraeusboorwel How do you know what you're looking for? There no spine display!
This is first UK based one I've seen. The only good thing about this is if you have a large collection and limited space.
Kinda pointless imo, it ruins the point of the CD case.
You miss the point, cases are bulky, crack, break and take a lot of space. The product is designed to save space and it does that very well.
@@dmomcilovic9185 That’s the only thing it does well, because it seems like the paper inserts will be damaged easily without the proper cases.
@@dmomcilovic9185 There's no spine display! Its silly!
No one do this
do they ship in the united states
Noticing this video being published only earlier this year, I'd say now's the time to start diversifying the business (if you're not doing so already), what with the huge move from physical to digital media...
Don't get me wrong, it's a great idea and looks very useful for those in this situation, but this is getting more and more obsolete with each year that passes.
Physical format is mass produced with literally millions of titles and millions of collectors. Like vinyl there are many reasons people will still buy physical, after all the kindle never stopped people buying books. DVDs and CDs are still mass produced and will continue. MP3s sound crap period.
Collectors don't want to throw out the jewel cases.
if you have thousands of cds and not tons of space, it seems to be a great solution.