I make reel strips like these all the time.
It's really pretty easy. First i would clean them.
Use "Mean Green" (dollar store product),
and spray on a rag. Then wipe the rag
across the strips. be careful though and
test on a small area as some inks are
water based.
On Wms strips (which are thicker), you can
spray the mean green right on the strip. But
on the ones shown above, that may be risky.
But Wms reels are much more durable and
don't use water based inks.
The mean green takes off the yellow/brown
crap. Sometimes pretty well to the point where
they are very usable.
In the cases where they are not usable, i scan
the strips in at 300 dpi and clean them up in
photoshop. Then i take them to Office Max and
have them re-printed on their large format
printer. They have some nice glossy stock that
is somewhat thin, and they come out perfect.
Even Wms backlite reel strips look great.
here's a sample of JP Party (2meg JPG file):
http://www.pinrepair.com/slots/wms/reels_jpparty.jpgNotice the lines down the sides. this makes cutting
them very easy. Office Max has a really nice long
format cutter that makes this a breeze.
Total cost on this is about $15. Sometimes they
have a sale at Office Max and i can print them
for about $8 for all three reels. I carry the files on
a memory stick and keep it in the car. When I see
the sale, i just hand them the memory stick and they
print them. This is WAY cheaper than EI or anyone
else. And frankly, i think the quality is better too
(because i can micro-manage the files and the "look").
Last time i check EI was about $60 to do this, and
the other vendors wanted even more.
Before I used Office Max and their large format
printer, I could also print these at home. Did it on
legal sized glossy photo paper. Had to splice two
pieces together. It actually worked pretty good, but
not as nice as Office Max. Having two seams isn't
as nice as the seemless Office Max solution. But in
a pinch, it worked quite well.