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- Fake ID's- using your computer pub # 1.0
- by
- The Pressman
-
- *****
- I, as the author, ask that none of these instructions be carried out.
- They are for information purposes only. Forgery of legal documents is
- highly illegal, and so is possession of one.
- *****
-
- There are two graphics files that should have come with this text
- file. One should be a .GIF. It is the illustrations. The second is an
- .EPS file. It is an example of the work. Both files should be readable
- on an IBM or Mac.
-
- Fake ID's are a fast growing underground business. They are a
- perfect way for the average equipped anarchist to bring in a little extra
- cash. Plus, if your underage, you can safely buy gun powder and
- chemicals. Even if you aren't a minor, it's a great way to eliminate
- your name from records.
-
- A word about the final product-
-
- These ID's are not perfect. You CANNOT, I repeat, CANNOT!, fool a
- police officer, border patrol, or other forms of legal authority with
- these. They are not designed to be taken out of a wallet. Have them
- behind the clear plastic where lots of people keep them. You cannot
- use them at places that require you to take them out.
- You can, however, fool most liquor store owners, night club
- bouncers, and bar tenders. This, of course, depends on how old you
- look. Obviously a 12 year old is always going to have trouble getting
- into a 21 or over nightclub, no matter how convincing the ID. If you
- plan to sell this stuff, I advise you to warn your costumer of these
- things. Remember, when doing business with the underground, an
- unhappy costumer can be a dangerous costumer.
- These ID's are not easy to make, and require much patience. A fair
- amount of knowledge dealing with desktop graphics is needed. The
- directions will tell you what to do, but it's your job to figure out how to
- use your software.
-
- Equipment:
- 1. Computer with at least a 640/480 16 color VGA system. NOTE: It
- is definitely possible to use a Mac. All of the software references are
- IBM stuff, since I know nothing about Macs.
- 2. Semi professional DRAWING program, not a painting program. I'd
- use Corel Draw 3.0. Paint programs like PC Paintbrush, and Deluxe
- Paint will not work.
- 3. Fonts. You'll need Helvetica Black (kind of a super bold), plain
- Helvetica, some kind of computer print looking font. I'd use Corel
- Draw's LCD.
- 4. 300 DPI or higher laser printer, it must be able to print
- transparencies. Most can, but check your manual. Don't worry about
- color output.
- 5. 35 mm camera (optional)
- 6. Razor blade, the wider the better.
- 7. Sharp, accurate scissors. (Very important)
-
- Supplies:
- 1. Transparencies. You can find these at any office supply store.
- They must be the kind that your laser printer can use.
- 2. Elmer's rubber cement.
- 3. Vector based clipart of your state flag. Or, if your an artist, you
- can draw it.
- 4. Real license. (It will remain undamaged)
-
- Directions:
-
- I Choosing your state
-
- The first thing that must be done is to choose the state that you ID
- will portray. It is best to choose your home state, but this is not
- always possible. Use this questionnaire to help you with your
- decision.
-
- Part 1
- 1. Does your state license have any kind of holograms, bar codes, or
- any other electronic data stored on it?
- 2. Does it consist of any other color besides these seven colors: red,
- blue, green, yellow, purple, cyan, or magenta? (They must be EXACT.
- Goldenrod does not mean yellow, teal does not mean green.)
- 3. Is there any special lamination coating on the license? (Example:
- The state seal embedded in the plastic.)
- If you answered "yes" to any of these three questions, then go to Part
- 2, you cannot use your home state. If you answered "no" to all of
- these questions, then use your own state license, jump to II.
-
- Part 2
- Since you cannot use your home state, you'll have to choose a
- different one. Use the guidelines to help with your decision.
-
- 1. Don't choose a state that has frequent visitors in your own state.
- For example, Oregon has lots of visitors from California, Idaho, and
- Washington. If you live in Kansas, you definitely wouldn't choose
- Missouri.
- 2. Choose a state that isn't well known in your area, but the people
- don't act or talk too different from yourself. For example, If you live in
- Maine, don't choose Hawaii or Texas. Alaska or Washington would be
- a better choice.
-
- II Drawing the license (Illustration #1)
-
- Even if your using a different state, design it to look as close as
- possible to your own. This will ad a touch of familiarity that will
- influence the realism.
-
- The size is very important. It must be EXACT. Measure the border
- with an accurate ruler, preferably the clear kind. Then draw a box
- accordingly. Round the corners to the correct degree.
-
- A The black
-
- 1. Measure all of the boxes and lines. Draw them.
- 2. Label them with the correct font; this might take some
- experimentation. Example, Date of Birth, License number.
-
- 3. Fill in the boxes with your bogus information. Remember to put
- your real height, weight. (duh.) Never use your real name. (duh
- again) Use the computer font.
- 4. Check an adults license, it looks a little different than a minors.
-
- B The color
-
- 1. Import the flag clipart. Remove everything but the seal. Change
- all the fill colors to clear, and the border colors to your state color.
- Touch up the seal according to your state.
- If you are using an out of state flag, add a double circle and inside,
- put the state name at the top, and the birth at the bottom. For the
- state color, use the main color on the seal. This makes a nice generic
- seal.
- Resize and place the seal in the correct spot.
-
- 2. Type in the state name, fill it with the state color. Use a hairline
- border with the same color. Remember to use the correct font.
- Resize, and stretch according to your license.
-
- III The photo
-
- This is perhaps the most difficult part of creating a fake ID. There are
- two methods.
-
- A Passport photo's
- You can pay six bucks for a passport photo. Remember to order the
- correct size, and to choose the proper curtain color. You can have
- passport photo's taken at most camera shops. Check the yellow
- pages.
-
- B Making your own
- This is much harder, but allows you save some money, and is also a
- little safer. The development cost is about the same, but that is for 24
- or 36 exposures, not one. You can fit a lot of people onto one roll of
- film.
-
- 1. Background
- a The background cannot be too reflective, or very textured. Shower
- and beach towels are terrible. Velvet dresses are perfect. Cotton
- sheets are ok.
- b Use the same color as on your license, or if it's an out of state one,
- use light but not pale colors. Black and dark blue are terrible. Red
- and green are great.
-
- 2. Lighting (Illustration #2)
- a Use flash, if you don't have it, read on.
- b You can use reading lamps for your lighting. The object is to
- eliminate drastic shadows.
-
- 3. Taking the picture
- a Use a 35 mm camera
- b Use a tripod, and fill the frame with the person's head.
- c Use slightly different zoom settings for each picture. Take at least
- five per person.
-
- 3. Development
- You can't develop these pictures at a 1 hour photo shop. Find a
- professional color photo lab, (check the yellow pages) and ask for a
- color contact sheet of the film. They are a large piece of photo paper
- with all of the developed photo's on it, the same size as a negative.
- That is the perfect size for an ID.
-
- IV Printing
-
- If you have a good color printer, then you can skip the rest of this. Just
- print it and sign it.
-
- A The black
- 1. Copy the black onto a new document, and keep the outline border.
- Print it out on a transparency, check your manual on how to do this.
-
- B The color
- 1. Copy the color onto a new document. Don't include the outline
- border, but keep the state name and symbol the same distances from
- each other. Label the top in big letters, "State Symbols" and tile a
- bunch of bogus state symbols with the name underneath. Half of
- them should be your state symbol and name. It is now disguised, and
- looks like some sort of school project. (Illustration #3)
- 2. Print it out on your printer.
- 3. Now take the paper to a print shop that has a color copier.
- (Laserquick, Kinko's). Ask the printer to copy these onto light gray
- paper in the color of your choice. Color copiers can print a single
- color image in eight colors. Red, blue, yellow, green, purple, cyan,
- magenta, and black. Tell the person what color you want. Get as
- many copies as you can afford. (Usually around 79 cents a piece.)
-
- V Assembly
- A The border
- The first thing to do is put a border around the colored background
- paper. To do this, scotch tape the corners of the transparency to a
- window. (During daytime.) Now take the colored background paper
- and hold it up to the window, align one of the color backgrounds to
- the black transparency, then tape in place. Take a very sharp pencil
- and lightly trace the border onto the background paper. Trace the
- upper right hand corner (where the photo should be) on the other
- side. DON'T CUT IT OUT YET.
-
- B The picture
- 1. Measure the picture on a real ID. Take a small piece of copier
- paper and draw it onto the paper. Cut it out, and put a very small
- drop (the size of a pin head) of rubber cement on the paper. Smear it
- around and let it dry.
- 2. Now press it against the photo you plan on using (Glue side
- down). Make sure it is aligned correctly, so that the edges of the
- paper make a perfect border around the covered picture. Using the
- paper as a guide, cut out the picture. Peal off the paper.
- 3. Take the razor blade and separate a corner of the thin, plastic
- coating consisting of the picture from the rest of the photo paper,
- making sure not to damage the photo. Now peal the rest away with
- your fingers. You should be left with a very thin picture, almost
- enough to see through it if it's held up to the light. It will probably be
- curled up; but don't worry about it.
- 4. Apply a healthy coating to the upper right corner on the
- background paper with rubber cement in the general area where the
- photo should be. (Illustration #4)
- 5. Press the photo into place, rolling it down onto the background.
- The upper right corner of the photo should stick out of the
- background border. When the whole thing is dry, use a pencil eraser
- to remove any dried rubber from the paper or photo. Be careful to rip
- or smudge anything.
-
- C The background
- 1. Take two sheets of copier paper, roughly the size of the ID (a little
- bigger), and glue them together with rubber cement. Glue them to the
- back of the background paper. Let it dry.
- 2. Carefully follow the pencil line, and cut out the background. When
- you get to the photo, turn it over and follow the pencil line on the
- other side. (Illustration #5) Use the eraser to remove any pencil
- marks left on the paper. You should be left with the colored parts of
- the ID, and the photo.
- 3. Measure the distance from the bottom of the card to the signature
- line. Draw the line in pencil. Sign the ID, using a fine line black pen.
- (Something like a uni ball micro by Faber-Castell)
- 4. Erase the pencil line after the pen has dried.
-
- D The black
- 1. Cut out the black foreground. Follow the black line exactly. Cut
- off any pieces that still have the black line on them.
- 2. Turn the transparency over, and apply a small glob of rubber
- cement to each corner of the transparency.
- 3. Using the razor blade like a squeegee, slide it through the glue and
- down off the plastic. Repeat this for each corner. You should have a
- thin film of glue on the back of each corner.
- 4. Align the transparency, and press it against the background. Do this
- quickly, before the glue dries, and make sure there are no air bubbles. If
- you do it right, you should have a complete looking ID.
-
- Insert the ID into a plastic pocket in a wallet. Be careful not to
- damage anything. Don't keep it there unless you're about to use it,
- otherwise, keep it wrapped up in protective paper, and store it behind
- your real license.
-
- If you have any questions, suggestions, or corrections, leave a
- message to The Pressman on the Ripco BBS. (312) 528-5020
-
- I'm very interested in information on alarm systems. If you'd like to
- share any of your knowledge, leave me a message.
-
- I'll update this file from time to time, so watch the publication number.
-