This is aimed at UK-based alt-printing practitioners.
Threads on here, and other sites, about alt-process printing often refer to the use of US or French made specialist papers (e.g. Arches Platine, Bergger COT320, Ruscombe Buxton & Herschel papers and so on), and it seems clear that such papers hold out a higher chance of straightforward tuning of one's own "workflow" and making consistently satisfactory prints.
In the UK, so far as I can ascertain, one can only buy Platine from Silverprint, COT320 from LinhofStudio or Ruscombe direct from the mill in France.
But I also wondered whether any alt-process printers in the UK (especially those making cyanotypes and salt prints) have any particular preferences or recommendations for more readily available watercolour papers from which excellent results have been had.
I was thinking particularly about papers from smaller mills and craft makers - St Cuthbert's Mill and Two Rivers Paper for instance, but there are a handful of others.
This isn't about price (good paper for any purpose is not "cheap") but about choice, ease of availability and support for domestic manufacturers.
So ... any good UK-made papers? Or indeed, any to avoid?
Threads on here, and other sites, about alt-process printing often refer to the use of US or French made specialist papers (e.g. Arches Platine, Bergger COT320, Ruscombe Buxton & Herschel papers and so on), and it seems clear that such papers hold out a higher chance of straightforward tuning of one's own "workflow" and making consistently satisfactory prints.
In the UK, so far as I can ascertain, one can only buy Platine from Silverprint, COT320 from LinhofStudio or Ruscombe direct from the mill in France.
But I also wondered whether any alt-process printers in the UK (especially those making cyanotypes and salt prints) have any particular preferences or recommendations for more readily available watercolour papers from which excellent results have been had.
I was thinking particularly about papers from smaller mills and craft makers - St Cuthbert's Mill and Two Rivers Paper for instance, but there are a handful of others.
This isn't about price (good paper for any purpose is not "cheap") but about choice, ease of availability and support for domestic manufacturers.
So ... any good UK-made papers? Or indeed, any to avoid?