Let me say, this would be much easier to explain in person. Be patient and give it a try.
I am cutting 4 1/2 by 6 1/2 pieces.
1. For practice mark a piece of 12x12 paper TOP, Bottom, Left, right. Mark the back too make sure the tops match etc. My sample is pink on the front white on the back.
2. Figure out where 6 inches is on the side of your cutter
on my cutter, the screw in the arm of the blade is around 6 inches. You may want to permanently mark this point.
3. align the left margin of the paper to 4.5 inches using the measurements along the top of the cutter.
4.Cut the paper to where you think 6.5 inches is. You don't want to over shoot it. If you go over 7 inches, you won't be able to get 4 mats.
5. This is the hardest step. Flip the paper over -- pull the top toward you so that you now have the back of the paper showing, and it is upside down. The partial cut you made will be in the lower left corner.
6. rotate the paper once to the right. align the left margin to the 6.5 mark along the top of your cutter. Now the partial cut you made is in the upper left quadrant. Cut slowly until you hit your previous cut.
Odds are, you didn't cut to perfectly 6.5 inches in the first cut. If you overshot it, you will have a mat at this point. If you undershot it, you need to put the paper back in its original postion and finish the cut.
It gets easier from here.
Put the paper back in the original position.
Rotate once to the left. Align left margin to 4.5 inches along the top. Cut. trim your piece to 6.5 inches.
put the reamining piece back in the original position. Rotate 2 times to the left (bottom is at the top now). Align left margin to 4.5 inches along the top. Cut. trim your piece to 6.5 inches.
THis photo is a bit confusing -- I didn't line it up to 4.5 inches until after i took the photo -- sorry.
cut the last piece to 4.5 x 6.5
Okay --- this sounds horribly confusing but try it. It is not hard to do with practice. I had to keep referring back to the original position, but when you get the hang of it, you won't have to. It is just a series of cuts and turns.
Let me know if there is anyway I can make these directions better.
I am cutting 4 1/2 by 6 1/2 pieces.
1. For practice mark a piece of 12x12 paper TOP, Bottom, Left, right. Mark the back too make sure the tops match etc. My sample is pink on the front white on the back.
2. Figure out where 6 inches is on the side of your cutter

on my cutter, the screw in the arm of the blade is around 6 inches. You may want to permanently mark this point.
3. align the left margin of the paper to 4.5 inches using the measurements along the top of the cutter.

4.Cut the paper to where you think 6.5 inches is. You don't want to over shoot it. If you go over 7 inches, you won't be able to get 4 mats.

5. This is the hardest step. Flip the paper over -- pull the top toward you so that you now have the back of the paper showing, and it is upside down. The partial cut you made will be in the lower left corner.

6. rotate the paper once to the right. align the left margin to the 6.5 mark along the top of your cutter. Now the partial cut you made is in the upper left quadrant. Cut slowly until you hit your previous cut.

Odds are, you didn't cut to perfectly 6.5 inches in the first cut. If you overshot it, you will have a mat at this point. If you undershot it, you need to put the paper back in its original postion and finish the cut.

It gets easier from here.
Put the paper back in the original position.

Rotate once to the left. Align left margin to 4.5 inches along the top. Cut. trim your piece to 6.5 inches.

put the reamining piece back in the original position. Rotate 2 times to the left (bottom is at the top now). Align left margin to 4.5 inches along the top. Cut. trim your piece to 6.5 inches.
THis photo is a bit confusing -- I didn't line it up to 4.5 inches until after i took the photo -- sorry.

cut the last piece to 4.5 x 6.5

Okay --- this sounds horribly confusing but try it. It is not hard to do with practice. I had to keep referring back to the original position, but when you get the hang of it, you won't have to. It is just a series of cuts and turns.
Let me know if there is anyway I can make these directions better.