
 
Paper is perhaps the most varied surface you can work on –
from smooth to rough, hard to soft, thin to thick. It is easy to cut,
fold, pierce, join, and tear. Even good paper is relatively inexpensive,
providing a cheaper alternative than canvas for acrylic and oil
painters, as well as a perfect surface for all drawing media,
printmaking, and watercolour techniques.
We stock artist’s papers & boards
from European manufacturers who’ve been making paper for hundreds of
years, like Hahnemuhle (est.1584) and Fabriano (est.13th Century), as
their quality and range of papers is second to none, and with paper it’s
all about choice!
We have around 100 different drawing & painting papers, so you can find the perfect surface for your technique.
Papers for dry media
- pencil, charcoal, pastel for example - are usually reasonably
lightweight (70 – 200gsm. Paper weight is measured in Grams per Square
Metre) and have a fine to medium surface. If you’re doing a lot of
erasing, a hard paper is best, like Hahnemuhle’s Stella range, otherwise
the surface will “pill”.
If you’re using wet media,
such as paint, then a heavier weight 250 – 600gsm paper is much more
stable. Painting papers range from very smooth, which produce delicate
flat washes with watercolour and ink, through to very coarse textures
that easily convey a sense of depth. Water-based paints can be used
straight on paper, but oilpaint will damage paper unless you seal it
first (GAC100 works well and makes a cheap oilpainting surface!), or you
can use our special Oilpainting Paper.
Printmaking
papers usually need to be quite soft and absorbent, though some
techniques demand that the ink dries on the surface, so harder papers
are required. Hahnemuhle make world-famous printmaking papers, for
intaglio, etching, silk screen, and lithographic techniques.
Many of our papers are suited to mixed media.
The 300gsm Britannia paper is by far our most popular, and performs
well for many painting, printmaking, and drawing techniques.
As well as suiting your technique, a good
art paper will resist the damaging effects of UV light and humidity,
and be in itself archival. Cotton (rag) is used to make the most durable
papers, being naturally composed of long-chain alpha cellulose. Wood
pulp in addition contains lignin, which is an acidic compound that will
degrade paper over a relatively short period of time. To make good
artist’s paper from wood pulp therefore, this lignin is removed, and the
resulting alpha-cellulose pulp is called “wood-free”. Cheaper to
make than cotton, “wood-free” pulp still makes a high quality paper.
We have nice, big, flat sheets of paper
– up to 860 x 1220mm for the Hahnemuhle 300gsm Mount Card, which takes
paint well, and we supply even larger sizes on the roll – 200gsm Stella
is available up to 1480mm x 20m! The smallest
size paper with a genuine deckle (that irregular wavy edge on
mould-made papers) is the 300gsm William Turner at 330 x 480mm, a
beautiful soft watercolour paper, but we guillotine paper down to just
100mm on request.

A lot of paper these days is marketed as “acid-free” but has
just been buffered with calcium carbonate to neutralise the acid, which
returns once the calcium breaks down. Check that the paper you buy for
your artworks is “archival”, not just
“acid-free”! Our Hahnemuhle papers are all made to the highest standards
(DIN-Norm 6738) to ensure resistance to deterioration over several
centuries!

The new Hahnemuhle 265gsm Bamboo Paper.
Not only is this beautiful, warm-white paper especially suited for
working with watercolour, inks, pastel, pencil and mixed media, it is
made from 90% bamboo, one of the planet’s most renewable resources. Save
the planet one drawing at a time! The other 10% is made from cotton and
being Hahnemuhle, Bamboo Paper is extremely age-resistant.
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