Hi there!
Me again.
I've been googlin this for a week. If there was some post here (or somewhere else) - please give me a link if you can.
I know this is a common issue, but...
Is there any way to produce uncurled carbon paper? Is making curtain coater the only way? (I've seen the patents, looks promising)
What I was trying:
Coating both pre-soaked and dry papers.
pouring pigmented gelatin solution and spreading with fingers or with rod (fingers was better), with or without the frame.
PE-like coating blade surrogate (wooden [ bracket with rod in place of the blade), works fine and gives even coats, but paper curls.
or with serigraph/silkscreen V-shaped aluminum coater
The coater looks like a aluminum gutter or a half-pipe with closed ends. I poured liquid coat into, pressed it onto a paper and moved all down - this way coating the paper. It was something like 75% waste of of the coating solution. The paper remained *almost* uncurled, but the coat was to thin, so I think with thicker coat it will be more curled.
I've also tried to pour coat directly onto the glass and put wet paper onto it. After drying I was unable to separate the tissue with support and glass - the sandwich is taking long bath now.
I used papers:
One-side coated offset printing paper (used for calendars), something like 150 g/m2
Fabriano Accademia 120g/m2
ordinary white office paper 80g/m2
Coats have 7-20% of edible gelatin, pigment, sugar, and sometimes soap, thickness varying from 0,5 to 2mm.
And paper after drying was always curled. Less or more, but always. If less - It was left to flatten under heavy load. If cracks while trying to fit it in there - it goes to trash.
Any hints to make the paper flat?
I know one good way: Buy myself 10 plexi, PVC or glass sheets (my wallet say it is maximum for now), but it is not cheap, not easy to store or wash, and allows me to go with small runs only. Using old LF Photo sheets is not a good way for me (don't have it), but maybe inkjet/laser transparencies will work?
Next thing I'm going to try will be 0,3-0,5 mm thick 50% gelatin layer - almost like a paste - and coating dry paper with PE's blade surrogate.
Cheers,
Luke
Me again.
I've been googlin this for a week. If there was some post here (or somewhere else) - please give me a link if you can.
I know this is a common issue, but...
Is there any way to produce uncurled carbon paper? Is making curtain coater the only way? (I've seen the patents, looks promising)
What I was trying:
Coating both pre-soaked and dry papers.
pouring pigmented gelatin solution and spreading with fingers or with rod (fingers was better), with or without the frame.
PE-like coating blade surrogate (wooden [ bracket with rod in place of the blade), works fine and gives even coats, but paper curls.
or with serigraph/silkscreen V-shaped aluminum coater
The coater looks like a aluminum gutter or a half-pipe with closed ends. I poured liquid coat into, pressed it onto a paper and moved all down - this way coating the paper. It was something like 75% waste of of the coating solution. The paper remained *almost* uncurled, but the coat was to thin, so I think with thicker coat it will be more curled.
I've also tried to pour coat directly onto the glass and put wet paper onto it. After drying I was unable to separate the tissue with support and glass - the sandwich is taking long bath now.
I used papers:
One-side coated offset printing paper (used for calendars), something like 150 g/m2
Fabriano Accademia 120g/m2
ordinary white office paper 80g/m2
Coats have 7-20% of edible gelatin, pigment, sugar, and sometimes soap, thickness varying from 0,5 to 2mm.
And paper after drying was always curled. Less or more, but always. If less - It was left to flatten under heavy load. If cracks while trying to fit it in there - it goes to trash.
Any hints to make the paper flat?
I know one good way: Buy myself 10 plexi, PVC or glass sheets (my wallet say it is maximum for now), but it is not cheap, not easy to store or wash, and allows me to go with small runs only. Using old LF Photo sheets is not a good way for me (don't have it), but maybe inkjet/laser transparencies will work?
Next thing I'm going to try will be 0,3-0,5 mm thick 50% gelatin layer - almost like a paste - and coating dry paper with PE's blade surrogate.
Cheers,
Luke