rpavich
Member
I found that I like making small prints for everyday stuff; for giving to people, and for putting in the shoebox for when I'm 75 years old.
I have a large saunders easel that's not well suited to this sort of thing but I also have a "4-in-1" easel that does 2.5 x 3.5, and 3.5 x 5, and up.
I've been just taking my 4x6 paper and slicing it in half to make the smallest ones and letting the print edges be asymmetrical, since it seems that nobody sells paper in this size. For the 3.5 x 5's I purchased paper in that size.
How do you go about this? Any good tips that I might not have thought of?
I was thinking about just forgetting using the easel's edges and making borderless prints by sticking the paper to the easel by moistening the back of the paper with spit. It works when doing test strips. That was the odd border size won't be so obvious.
I have a large saunders easel that's not well suited to this sort of thing but I also have a "4-in-1" easel that does 2.5 x 3.5, and 3.5 x 5, and up.
I've been just taking my 4x6 paper and slicing it in half to make the smallest ones and letting the print edges be asymmetrical, since it seems that nobody sells paper in this size. For the 3.5 x 5's I purchased paper in that size.
How do you go about this? Any good tips that I might not have thought of?
I was thinking about just forgetting using the easel's edges and making borderless prints by sticking the paper to the easel by moistening the back of the paper with spit. It works when doing test strips. That was the odd border size won't be so obvious.