... If were are more people in Round 10, we should maybe think about splitting the whole group into two sub-groups...
Yes, the system we are following right now is much more flexible than two separate groups. And if there are people who want to do the full set, two distinct groups would be not the right solution for them. In round 10 we will split the people in as many groups as we need to make everyone satisfied. Well the people applying for many cards or the maximum number may end up in groups a bit smaller than the maximum because there may be no exact fit for everyone. But the algorithm makes sure that everyone will get as many cards as he/she sends out (not taking into account that there might be participants who do not send cards or that cards get lost... That idea came up a few rounds back and the result was the ability for everyone to set a limit on how many cards they wanted to print.
recommend a brand of ink that will remain legible on RC paper but won't irretrievably gum up my pen if such a thing is possible!
Thank you,
Ian
Stan,
I use a fountain pen for most of my writing, and I've found that Parker ink does well with RC paper if you let it sit for about 5 or 10 minutes. As far as I know, it will not easily smudge after that time in handling. I'll see if I can find some of my bookmarks for ink sellers - do you have one that you can fill yourself, or is it a cartridge model?
- Randy
Please can anyone recommend a brand of ink that will remain legible on RC paper
Warning - this reply may be seen by some as straying off topic....
Firstly Ian, Sharpie markers work well on the backs of the Ilford Postcard Paper. Another thing that I find works well is a 4B pencil.
Secondly - a rant (I hope Simon Galley is listening). A few years back, (before Harman) I had a friend who asked me to take some boudoir photos of her, and make them into a calender that she would give to her husband as a gift. My original thought was to print on RC because of how nicely it stays flat when unmounted, and to run the prints through a computer printer to print the calender grids on the backs of the prints, then spiral bind the calender. I soon discovered that there is no computer print technolgy capable of printing on the back of an RC print - even more frustrating, it was impossible to get through to someone who even understood the problem. My initial printer of choice was my Epson 1280 inkjet - it prints on transparancy material - ought to be no problem printing on the back of an RC print, nope. I called Epson, they pointed out that they made 'photo paper' which could be printed on both sides and that ought to work fine. They had no concept of what silver gelatin was. I called Ilford thinking that since they made both RC paper and inkjet paper that they would at least understand the problem, but even before they split into two companies, they might as well have been because there did not seem to be anybody there who was bilingual (A/D).
A really neat product would be an RC paper, with a non-plasticized back so that it could be written on. It would be the ideal material to make postcards and calenders out of.
Rant ends....
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