Also note that the real stuff novocaine linked to is "only" 0.5 mm thick and costs over 11 quid. The ABS look alike that the OP linked to is, I think, 2 mm thick and costs about 2 quid if I remember correctly.
Re cutting the real stuff, I've had little hands-on experience (the new Airbus and Boeing models which are "99%" CRF were just coming in as I was going out of the industry to retire - previous generation Airbus and Boeing aeroplanes I experienced had "only" secondary structures and fairings, etc, made of CRF and other composites). So I didn't handle it very much (and as I got more "senior", my job was anyway mainly "watching" others.
BUT what somebody said above about being careful with splinters and slivers etc, when cutting is spot on. Cutting with a knife MAY be OK if it's thin flat sheet, but even then, if you're unlucky, offcut bits can be REALLY sharp and they HURT LIKE HELL in yer finger (as said before, please DAMHIKT)!
The aviation people who deal with this stuff every day in finished state use special gloves, made from, I think, Kevlar (in it's "raw/uncooked" state it's quite benign). But a small splinter of finished state stuff is VERY sharp (as bad as grabbing a handful of SS swarf off the lathe!!!) and a bit in your eye would, I image, be VERY dangerous indeed and need instant medical attention.
Personally, I liked the suggestion that came up quite a few posts above - "use ali"! But then I'm an old-fashioned, stick in the mud sort of cove.