Where To Get Large Paper Targets?

Contact the DCRA. They will sell you target centers that are about 24.5"x24.5". They are black with a 12" circle and a 24" circle. These are/were the standard TR target centers.
 
Get some kraft parcel wrapping paper which will give you a 30" wide backing. Put two side by side and that is big enough to catch any strays

Then put a piece of coloured paper in the middle. Any store will sell coloured paper used for kids crafts. I like pink and orange for max contrast - you may find green to work for your eyes. Size ranges from normal paper size to 24" squares.

Spray painting a mark will work too.

Simple and readily available.

Jerry
 
Office Depot or Staples have the big tear off pages that are used for those stand up flip page easels, can even get it with 1" grid, comes in bundles of 50 Add your own dot to middle any color any size
 
1000m

I'd agree with Majestic for size, the actual targets are 4' X4' but the backboad may be a lot bigger.
Anyway once your on the board, this is narrowed down.
It's 5 shoots into 8" OR SMALLER.
STRAIGHT SHOOTING, Bill
 
Canadian tire sells bow-and-arrow targets of various sizes. I don't recall any that were 4'x4', but I know they had 1'x1' and I think they had 2'x2'
 
Shooting at a 4'x4' target at 900m/1000y is doable, if you have everything set up and figured out already. If you don't, or if you are doing any sort of load development, using a 6'x6' target board is a vast improvement. Standard US practice is to use 6'x6' target boards for long range (800y-1000y) shooting. In Canada we use 6'x6', or 6'x8', and occasionally even 6'x10' (all are 6' high; the larger dimension is the width, which can help keep bullets on the target board in variable wind conditions).

For shooting with iron sights at 1000y, you need at least a 6'x6' light coloured board, with a reasonably large dark aiming mark (the US target is a 44" diameter black, the Canadian and British is 48").

Using a scope makes things a lot simpler. All you need is an aiming mark that provides enough contrast to give you a decent sight picture. A darker coloured circle or square that is 1' or 2' in size would be just fine. You might go to a local newspaper office and get their newsprint ends - staple that onto your target board to make a clean surface in which shot holes will be visible, then put an aiming mark in the middle. As you shoot your target, either mark your shot holes with a pen or put a patch (or piece of masking tape) over the holes.
 
Furniture and appliance stores will some times put out cardboard boxes that large appliances are shipped in. Works great for a backdrop----I buy the packs of stick-on hunter orange target dots that WSS sells----you can see the six inch diameter ones a long way out.
 
Gov't liquor stores get all their signage sent to them in large flat cardboard boxes. Talk to your local manager.
 
I bought 10 42" X 42" from Millarm in Edmonton. Reasonably priced. Haven't used them yet. I was planning on mounting them on a $7.00 piece of OSB.
Have fun!
 
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