I think it will help if you told us what you use that has a yellowish base. Otherwise there is a danger that what others regard as a creamy base you see as a yellowish base so you avoid getting recommendations that in fact is part of the problem rather than part of the solutionCan anyone please recommend a variable contrast, warm tone, fiber base paper that has a creamy base rather than a yellowish base?
I think it will help if you told us what you use that has a yellowish base. Otherwise there is a danger that what others regard as a creamy base you see as a yellowish base so you avoid getting recommendations that in fact is part of the problem rather than part of the solution
pentaxuser
Can anyone please recommend a variable contrast, warm tone, fiber base paper that has a creamy base rather than a yellowish base?
Try some Ilford Multigrade Fiber base Warmtone paper, the image color is an attractive warm black and the paper base is ivory, and it is readily available in most sizes. The "glossy" finish air-dries to a semi-gloss surface with good deep blacks. I use it with (always fresh) Ilford MG developer.
It seems our definitions of white are different, we have had this conversation before. I am referring to the paper supplied in the USA by a large retailer in the past six months which is ivory not white. This is confirmed by the Ilford paper sample swatch book in which there are white base papers (for example the RC MG papers) and the Warmtone paper bound together for side by side comparison. The warmtone paper is different from the white base papers.
The warmest base I've seen recently was Fomabrom Variant 111, I really like the paper but won't use it in my exhibition sets.
Ian
I find this strange. Fomabrom Variant 111 should be white, Ilford Warmtone warm white (and distictively so), and Fomatone creamy.
I'm referring to the current Ilford Multigrade Warmtone paper and comparisons to other warm tone papers, it's very significantly different now to when it was first introduced. When Agfa puled out of the market I needed a replacement for their Classic warm tone paper (MCC) and the only alternative with a similar base colour at that point was Forte Polywarmtone. I'd gone through this many years before when selecting a paper at that time Ilford didn't make a warm tone paper, But in the meantime Ilford had re-entered the warm tone market and so looked at the Ilford Warmtone FB and talked to Ilford staff about it, but I really disliked the base colour at that point.
After comments about the change in paper base on this Forum I tried the Ilford Warmtone paper with the new base and with Polywarmtone gone (although I still have quite a bit) I switched. Like Ilford I'd call it a warm white base but it's not remotely like the original Ilford Warmtone FB or the creamy/ivory bases of older papers.
The warmest base I've seen recently was Fomabrom Variant 111, I really like the paper but won't use it in my exhibition sets.
Ian
I take that as agreement that Ilford FB Warmtone has a warm white base.
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