Premium 140lb & 300lb watercolor paper at an affordable price
New York Central’s Watercolor Paper is made on a slowly rotating cylinder mould. The machine evenly distributes long cotton fibers to make each durable sheet. Internal and external gelatin sizing prevents paint bleed-through and preserves color vibrancy. Each sheet is 100% Cotton and has a balanced grain that softens as a unit when wet. The paper can withstand a multitude of techniques, including wet color blending, paper scratching, and scrubbing.
The 5x7", 9x12", 11x14", 16x20", and 22x30" watercolor sheets come in reusable zip-top packaging designed to keep your paper clean. New York Central® Watercolor Paper is ideal for wet and dry media, especially watercolor, gouache, ink, and fluid acrylic paint.
The story (as I understand it) is they make the paper themselves
Okay... my bad...it’s a rebranded product.No way. Papermaking isn't exactly a cottage industry - at least not the paper that retails for such a modest price as this. This is mass production, so it's done by a manufacturer. It's true though that many manufacturers will happily make batches of paper to "your" specifications (e.g. "give me a 100% rag 250gsm paper with internal sizing" and then the manufacturer will work out the details for you). If you consider that as "making it themselves", OK. I'd call it 'contract manufacturing'. If it's that, to begin with, of course. There's also a good chance it's not custom made at all and simply one of the default/generic papers the manufacturer carries and it's sold under several brands by whomever wants to pay for it.
The fact that the price is modest necessarily means that they don't make it themselves!
Which is why I asked here if anyone had used it for argyrotypes.It may be possible to find out who makes it, or perhaps the names of a few 'usual suspects'. The question then remains what this would tell you. It doesn't mean it'll be necessarily identical to a different paper of the same manufacturer. For instance, imagine it's (random example) Arches, it wouldn't make this paper automatically related to, say, Platine. It may still be totally different in very notable ways - depending on which process(es) you intend to use it for.
And even if you have a definitive 'match' with a manufacturer, it'll be difficult to find out anything specific about the paper. It's uncommon/rare/unique in this industry to publish anything at all about the actual specifications of the paper beyond the major specs you can already see on the product page....
Thanks.It’s on Christina’s Massive Paper Chart. I won’t say more, as her document is more than worth the modest price of admission, and I can’t fathom the work she put into all of those tests.
It’s big… it’s huge… it’s The MASSIVE paper chart for alternative processes – AlternativePhotography.com
www.alternativephotography.com
...I'll put in a plug for buying the 'full' version of the spreadsheet and supporting folks who do research such as this.
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