Paper negs can give great results and is a very economical way to use large format. One thing to avoid (in my opinion) is not to give the neg a normal paper development as it will result in a very harsh, contrasty neg. i did a large portrait project with a friend a few years ago, and after lots of testing, settled on a rating of 3 ISO but developed in PQ developer at 1+40 or 1+50 for about 3 minutes to produce a softer neg. (Don't have my notes to hamd!) Of course the tonality is Orthochromatic, so can be similar to the look of Collodion. The ones here on this link were all shot in the same studio with daylight, nearly all at 8 second exposures, but moving the subject to get different lighting results. Also using white and black reflectors to model the light.
http://www.mike-crawford.co.uk/portfolio/atkinson-crawford/atkinson-crawford-one.html
An example below of the tonalty of the negatives. For full disclosure, I did scan the negatives for digital printing to avoid printing through the texture of the paper base, though a friend has a great way of printing using a large vertical process camera to print directly from the negative which is illuminated by the copy lights.