M Carter
Member
So after getting tired of fixing out 16x20 paper for coating, I took a chance on a roll of Canson Baryta. My word, you can make gorgeous coatings on that if you have a project that needs a smooth "factory" look. Could not find Baryta in reasonable quantities at larger sizes, the roll is 24" by- I dunno, the width of Rhode Island?
Anyway - my process, soak the paper, lay it on glass, cover with mylar and squeegie, then towel off the edges and glass puddles. I have 2 pieces of 1/2" angle iron painted black, with stick-on foam running the length - those are set to contain the edges from spillover. Coat gelatin + glyoxal with a glass rod; dry overnight. Then repeat the process with emulsion.
For these big sheets, I dampen a towel and put it in the freezer for ten minutes and move it to a small soft "lunch" cooler. After coating (both the gelatin step and the emulsion step), I lay out the towel folded double, and carefully transfer the glass sheet to it - the emulsion sets very quickly this way, the glass gets very cold. I use bondo squeegies to trim off the overage, and I have a thin aluminum bar with metal clips affixed to it - I clip it along the bottom of the paper and use the bar to lift the sheet from the glass, no curling. Hang to dry.
I needed a good bromoil paper and man, this is really the shizz.
Anyway - my process, soak the paper, lay it on glass, cover with mylar and squeegie, then towel off the edges and glass puddles. I have 2 pieces of 1/2" angle iron painted black, with stick-on foam running the length - those are set to contain the edges from spillover. Coat gelatin + glyoxal with a glass rod; dry overnight. Then repeat the process with emulsion.
For these big sheets, I dampen a towel and put it in the freezer for ten minutes and move it to a small soft "lunch" cooler. After coating (both the gelatin step and the emulsion step), I lay out the towel folded double, and carefully transfer the glass sheet to it - the emulsion sets very quickly this way, the glass gets very cold. I use bondo squeegies to trim off the overage, and I have a thin aluminum bar with metal clips affixed to it - I clip it along the bottom of the paper and use the bar to lift the sheet from the glass, no curling. Hang to dry.
I needed a good bromoil paper and man, this is really the shizz.