Cotton Watercolour Paper Comparison: 0 v 25 v 50 v 100%

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  • čas přidán 7. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 127

  • @thanos8726
    @thanos8726 Před 3 lety +53

    100% Cotton paper is essential for watercolor . You can find some decent alternative paper with low quantity of cotton or with a heavy chemical sizing like the canson montval but they will behave differently . My favorite is Arches and Sthratmore imperial 100% cotton paper . Blending is perfect , you can use huge quantity of water and even the colors will look brighter the only problem is that it's very expensive but it's worthed for the quality . I think also that some beginners find watercolors annoying to use also because they don't have the possibility to paint on a good paper . I still believe that professional art materials are even more needed by beginner than real professional because they already don't know how to paint if they use very low quality material the result is just a big mess . 😌😫😫

    • @marshmellow5344
      @marshmellow5344 Před 3 lety +8

      Exactly my thoughts with beginners! I was once a beginner before, and having cheap materials, I really thought it was hopeless for me because I don't seem to be improving. But that was because I was using very poor materials. So having good quality materials as a beginner will really help you track your progress properly. :)

    • @ravwarrior820
      @ravwarrior820 Před 3 lety

      Is it possible that a watercolour paper is 300 gsm but doesn't contain cotton in any percentage ??

    • @lamureon
      @lamureon Před 3 lety +1

      @@ravwarrior820 yes, these aren't related. 300gsm is just the thickness

    • @jmbosquesillo7203
      @jmbosquesillo7203 Před rokem +2

      No it isn’t. Art is for everyone not just for the wealthy. Good quality paper doesn’t need be 100%.

    • @Oozaru85
      @Oozaru85 Před měsícem

      Depends on how you use the paper. I do illustrations mostly and do lots of liftig. Which does not work as well on cotton paper. I have some pads of 100% cotton paper, but I barely use them. I mostly use my cheap wood pulp paper. Especially for practice. Not gonna waste expensive paper for practice.

  • @user-xo4jd4ot8s
    @user-xo4jd4ot8s Před 3 lety +15

    Now I start to apprecitate all kinds of surface, learning the characteriatcs of each and ultilizing them instead of simply skipping them.

  • @tracyphoenix8
    @tracyphoenix8 Před 2 lety +8

    This video and demo has been an eye opener. Artists always say get the best paper and ctn ppr is the best. Now I really can see why. Just by looking at the layout of the 6 diff. papers side by side after you applied the colors and before you explained, I finally see the difference. You made my paper buying decision a lot easier. Thank you.

  • @65sunnyday
    @65sunnyday Před 4 lety +27

    Some surprising discoveries; expected conclusion. Always interesting topics, Teoh, and helpful as usual. Thank you!

  • @warpedweft9004
    @warpedweft9004 Před rokem +2

    This is very useful information. I've tried arches and don't like it for the type of work I do. I have some Bao Hong and some old saunders and find the water stays on the surface a bit longer on Bao Hong than saunders, so for wet in wet it gives you a bit more time to work. However, I have heard that saunders changed their paper formula a while ago. My saunders paper is about 10 years old, bought for another purpose before I started painting in watercolours, but if it's drying this quickly in the middle of an Australian winter, then I hate to think how it will perform in the heat of summer. I've tried budget 100% cotton paper, and it too is not good, with some cellulose papers performing better than those budget cotton ones, so cotton can't be the only factor. I'd also like to have seen how the colour lifts on each of the papers.
    My bottom line is that paper preference is a personal thing, depending on your painting style, so people claiming one brand is better than another need to temper it with "better for them" not better overall. For me, a mid-range cellulose brand is my preference for landscapes because of the texturing I can get, but for detailed botanical work, I'm still looking for the perfect paper to suit me.

  • @trondbirkeland8094
    @trondbirkeland8094 Před 4 lety +15

    Good detailed review! The blending when charging in may however not have so much to do with the cotton content as to how it is gelatine-sized, on the surface, one side only or internally. The real difference between cotton and cellulose wood pulp becomes evident when trying lifting and scrubbing. Recommend you add lifitng and scrubbing to the review tests, though those tecniques are not much used in urban scetching with watercolours.

    • @suzalasuzala1135
      @suzalasuzala1135 Před 4 lety +3

      absolutely, when scrubbing, the non 100% cotton papers almost disintegrate. Those same papers when you put too much water down or too many layers often pill, like a cheap sweater.

  • @lydiabosley9152
    @lydiabosley9152 Před 4 lety +17

    You are like a scientist-artist; very well designed experiments and clear and helpful results - thank you for your work on this!

    • @Lazulee__
      @Lazulee__ Před 4 lety +2

      I agree. I really appreciate this scientific-artistic approach!!!

  • @JennyXia
    @JennyXia Před 4 lety +6

    You have a knack for making videos I want to watch Teoh! Thanks for this informative video :D

  • @rustyj4388
    @rustyj4388 Před 4 lety +8

    I recently found your channels and I love it! I was never very careful when buying paper but this reminded me that it's really important. Thank you

  • @aimeecruise1779
    @aimeecruise1779 Před 4 lety +8

    This is one of the most informative videos I’ve seen in a while! Thanks Teoh!

  • @ThingOfSome
    @ThingOfSome Před 4 lety +15

    If it is the paper being "thirsty" that is creating those rough edges, it would also appear on the yellow swatch in the glazing test. Also, depending on the sizing, cotton paper should absorb less water less quickly than wood-pulp paper, so it is actually less "thirsty" than wood-pulp. In the dispersion tests, for example, that is why there are those harder lines, where the paint didn't disperse on the wood-pulp papers: because the paint is more quickly absorbed into the paper, instead of remaining longer on its surface.

  • @JaciPaso
    @JaciPaso Před 3 lety +1

    Best paper review I have seen… to the point with clear cut examples and explanations.

  • @PaulaBean
    @PaulaBean Před 4 lety +9

    I use 100% cotton paper nowadays, Arches, both cold and hot pressed. The rest is too unpredictable, although I might give Fabriano Artistico a try.

    • @Hugs4Rugs
      @Hugs4Rugs Před 3 lety

      Hello Paula have you tried them if so give a little review please?

  • @putiinput4215
    @putiinput4215 Před 3 lety +2

    I use Fabriano studio most of the times, now I know why I can't make decent wet on wet... maybe I should try the artistico one! Thank you for this video ^^

  • @MedaHalmaciu
    @MedaHalmaciu Před 4 lety +2

    I use cellulose paper for were on dry illustration or gouache. It generally fails when used for glazing (colors underneath disturbed) or wet on wet. I actually like the white speckles from Arches.

  • @OldTess
    @OldTess Před 3 měsíci

    Hi, I'm having Fabriano a lot of trouble getting hold of 100% cotton watercolor paper. Yes, I can only get hold of 25% cotton, acrylic paper and hot press. I live out in the country, my old painter I could buy all my materials. Unfortunately he died many years ago. Our beloved artist Bror-Erick..

  • @edzejandehaan9265
    @edzejandehaan9265 Před 4 lety +14

    Interesting. I tried to buy 25% cotton fabriano paper, but they send me 100 % intead as they other kind was sold out. I still haven't tried it out...😌

  • @rickdenbraber6869
    @rickdenbraber6869 Před 4 lety +1

    Wow! That was really informative for me. Gave me lots to think about the results that I have been getting with beginner skill level on various projects. Thank you.

  • @cristinalattuada5322
    @cristinalattuada5322 Před 2 lety

    Thank you so much, very kind of you to do this demo. 🙏

  • @snoozleblob
    @snoozleblob Před 4 lety

    Very interesting demonstration! Thanks for yet another informative video, Teoh. :D

  • @zaygezunt
    @zaygezunt Před 4 lety +1

    That was really interesting, thank you. You have some great ideas for videos 👍

  • @Lethersee
    @Lethersee Před 4 lety

    Thank you so much for this review. I just bought some Stonehenge Hot Press. It's 100% cotton. I'd known Stonehenge as a printmaking paper but apparently it's watercolor too. I honestly had not checked the cotton content until your review. Thank you again.

    • @Wacky_Whimsy
      @Wacky_Whimsy Před 4 lety +1

      Stonehenge Cold Press honestly works better for me for some reason - I prefer it much better than Arches or Fabriano Artistico.

  • @bigboyanimation3799
    @bigboyanimation3799 Před 4 lety +2

    When i was in school learning graphic design our teacher for drawing tell us to chose fabriano instead of canson because he dont have texture, i use it for gouache not watercolor i didnt test watercolor on it before but he have another cover its white and blue maybe for each country they make a cover different from another country

    • @marisawu3646
      @marisawu3646 Před 4 lety +1

      Probably just a different series! Here in Italy we have the white and blue cover too, but it’s more aimed at schools. Artist quality line is called Artistico instead, it’s sold in art stores (or online) only basically☺️

  • @ramreboot
    @ramreboot Před 4 lety +1

    I'm always so happy to watch your videos because of how detailed and informational they are, so I was over the moon to see a paper comparison video!! They're my favourite haha
    Anyway, suggestion but definitely no obligation, maybe you can give your thoughts on baohong paper and compare it to other 100% cotton papers?

    • @teohyc
      @teohyc  Před 4 lety

      I’ve not used Baohong before so I can’t say much

  • @riom5
    @riom5 Před 4 lety

    Thanks for your demonstration! My go-to art store has a new crazy cheap price for the artistico when buying 5 or more sheets, it's half the price as for arches, so I'm really considering using the artistico because of that.

  • @greyareaRK1
    @greyareaRK1 Před 4 lety +2

    Interesting video. Sizing seems to be as important as material.

  • @LeaGalTan
    @LeaGalTan Před 4 lety

    Thank you for demonstrating that paper is such an important part of watercolor painting. Hard t believe how big a part of plays!

  • @mkretov
    @mkretov Před 4 lety

    Great review! Was of big help to me! Keep doing such videos, you're very good at them!

  • @flavio8430
    @flavio8430 Před 4 lety +1

    Really useful comparison -- thanks for sharing.

  • @weeaboo_weirdo
    @weeaboo_weirdo Před 4 lety

    I'm not much of an artist but I love your videos! Paints are so pretty

  • @risherry
    @risherry Před 4 lety +1

    There is some Hahnemuhle paper with bamboo and 5% cotton. Also Nevskaya Palitra proceduces 75% cotton paper

    • @Finkeldinken
      @Finkeldinken Před 4 lety +1

      I think the Bamboo is 10% cotton?
      That being said my pad definitely has issues with sizing, so I don't use it at all for watercolours.
      That being said it's still a beautiful paper with a super nice texture, so I use it for other things instead.

  • @stevesidare2493
    @stevesidare2493 Před 3 lety +3

    The rough edges on cotton papers here are because of the texture more than anything.

  • @sanysmail
    @sanysmail Před rokem

    Hi @Teoh, whenever I see cotton watercolor paper reviews by artists and then advising usage of the same over the ordinary watercolor paper, it makes me think 'what did the watercolor masters from centuries ago must've used?' did they have cotton paper then?

  • @artKarolina
    @artKarolina Před 2 lety +1

    I know you're comparing quality but I see opportunity there. The paint behaves more like ink on the 0%. Could be great paper for comics or getting weird effects in sketches.

  • @richardmika2136
    @richardmika2136 Před 4 lety +2

    need one for cold press and hot press heh i usually go by price not by percent

  • @KittehNow
    @KittehNow Před 4 lety +1

    EXCELLENT...learned so much💗

  • @Jang09
    @Jang09 Před 4 lety +1

    I mainly use Arches watercolor paper (Cold and Hot press). Never had the white speckles effect before could just be a bad batch. Other than that its usually the best for me.

  • @barefacedquestions
    @barefacedquestions Před rokem

    Thank you so much for the informative test. Now I'm interested to know what would you use each type of paper for?

  • @krabfingers8473
    @krabfingers8473 Před 2 lety

    The Fabriano 5 is really expensive for me so I’m aiming for another 50% cotton one - Clairefontaine Cardinal paper. At Overjoyed the cardinal paper is cheaper than Clairefontaine 100% cotton watercolor paper, but still is an upgrade from 100% cellulose. It’s either this or their Overjoyed brand WC paper, which is quite affordable. I also asked the staff if their store brand’s paper is sized both ways and they answered yes! My previous option was Baohong but it seems the sizing is only one way :(

    • @teohyc
      @teohyc  Před 2 lety

      Baohong quality is quite good even for the student grade

  • @davelester1985
    @davelester1985 Před 4 lety

    I would think that the amount of sizing would help make a difference. Also, you noted that the design of the paper allowed the color to run vertically. But what about turning the paper to horizontal....?

  • @garyweybright3227
    @garyweybright3227 Před 4 lety +1

    Teoh, have you ever tried Lana Aquarelle watercolor paper from Germany.I would love to see how it stands up to the other cotton papers. Overall however, I enjoyed this very very much. My belief is, that your paper is THE most important part of a watercolor arsenal. Thank you, Claudia

    • @teohyc
      @teohyc  Před 4 lety +1

      LanaAquarelle quality is similar to Arches. It’s very good

    • @garyweybright3227
      @garyweybright3227 Před 4 lety

      Teoh Yi Chie , good I thought this was the case. Many people say the “sizing” is different, thus offering a different experience than Arches by some degree. Sizing has always been a mystery to me , but thank you for the information. Claudia

  • @OkieSketcher1949
    @OkieSketcher1949 Před 4 lety +1

    Reinforces what I’ve been told in earlier classes. Seeing is believing. Thanks.

  • @isabelleperezcade9967
    @isabelleperezcade9967 Před 4 lety +1

    very interested video Parka. I usually sketch on a Khadi paper sketchbook but use too Arches loose sheets paper , the best for me. Thanks for sharing !

  • @jmbosquesillo7203
    @jmbosquesillo7203 Před rokem

    Nice! Thanks

  • @Lazulee__
    @Lazulee__ Před 4 lety

    Thank you very much! I needed this comparison

  • @Winstonsmom
    @Winstonsmom Před rokem

    Have you tried Winsor and Newton? I quite like the texture of both the cold pressed and rough. Arches is as you say great in terms of blending bit it’s very hard on my pens. Even though it’s not cotton, the fluid blocks are really nice (and convenient) for ink and wash sketches. I haven’t tried the cotton version yet, but I just purchased one. The cold press doesn’t have a lot of texture so hoping that will be even better for urban sketching. I bought some fabriano studio and was disappointed as there seems to be uneven sizing on every page at roughly the same spot where the paint just doesn’t take. It was very strange. Thanks as always for your informative reviews. Much appreciated.

    • @teohyc
      @teohyc  Před rokem

      I've not tried WN watercolour paper. Arches surface is more sandy, like fine grain sand so it's not easy to draw with pens and will sand off felt tip pens in a day.
      Fluid has smoother surface. Fabriano Artistico works fine with pen. Fabriano Studio is so-so paper. Otherwise go with hotpress paper which are really nice too. I've been using coldpress for longest time and when I use up the paper I'll switch to hotpress which is so much nicer to draw on with pen.

  • @MassimilianoDeliso
    @MassimilianoDeliso Před 4 lety +15

    The wash on Arches looks really bad, what’s up with all of those white speckle! There is something wrong with the sizing! It’s not the first time I’ve noticed!

    • @aylinbegum5744
      @aylinbegum5744 Před 4 lety +1

      I saw a review comparing Arches and Canson with the same common quality points. Canson Heritage was better than Arches.

    • @gaelhillyardcreative
      @gaelhillyardcreative Před 4 lety +2

      @@aylinbegum5744 I have had so many problems with sizing and the paper resisting watercolour over the past 12 months. Really annoying given the price of it.

    • @aylinbegum5744
      @aylinbegum5744 Před 4 lety

      @@gaelhillyardcreative My main deception was with Saunders Waterford and it's very expensive in France

  • @Donna_G
    @Donna_G Před 4 lety +2

    I have both Arches and Strathmore 400 series watercolor paper. I prefer the Strathmore, even though there is no cotton in it. I live in a dry climate and watercolor paints dry out fast; so, it is really hard to do wet into wet. You used Daniel Smith paints for this test. I have a travel palette of Qor watercolor paints and when the color hits wet paper, it spreads out depending upon the wetness of the paint.
    Do you think the relative humidity in the environment could have an impact on how the paint and paper interact?

    • @teohyc
      @teohyc  Před 4 lety

      Humidity may make paint take longer to dry.

  • @megperry5586
    @megperry5586 Před 4 lety +1

    Thanks, very helpful

  • @joykruczay
    @joykruczay Před 2 lety

    Thanks ever so much for the informative video.

  • @aylinbegum5744
    @aylinbegum5744 Před 4 lety +1

    Hi Teoh! I didn't pay attention if you said hot pressed or cold press...

    • @teohyc
      @teohyc  Před 4 lety +1

      These are coldpress

  • @user-tn4mk1re4h
    @user-tn4mk1re4h Před 4 lety

    Teoh, by any chance, didn't You have an opportunity to try out a watercolor boards, like Arches or Strathmore produce? I know, this materials not specially good for sketching because of heavyness, but they provide a sturdy base for flow and wet-in-wet washes, even most watery ones.

    • @teohyc
      @teohyc  Před 4 lety

      I’ve not tried those before

  • @Taudlitz
    @Taudlitz Před 4 lety +1

    Have you also tried watercolour paper with linen content? And if yes, how does it compare to 100% cotton ones?

    • @teohyc
      @teohyc  Před 4 lety +1

      I’ve not tried those

  • @AkaruiNoKuma
    @AkaruiNoKuma Před 4 lety

    this video was super informative thank you!

  • @valentinoquijano355
    @valentinoquijano355 Před 2 lety

    I finally understand. Thank you.

  • @clearwater7000
    @clearwater7000 Před rokem

    Thank you!💓

  • @maxcaulfield5500
    @maxcaulfield5500 Před 4 lety +1

    You seem to use a lot of water. How come I always use like half of that and get so many waves it’s impossible to paint further? How do you do this?

    • @teohyc
      @teohyc  Před 4 lety

      How much water to use will also depend on what paper you use. You want to use just enough that the colours can blend but not too much that they overflow to places it shouldn’t

  • @lizziedae91
    @lizziedae91 Před 4 lety

    This will be a great video for beginners

  • @TimeCodeMechanics
    @TimeCodeMechanics Před 4 lety

    Thanks for this!

  • @makeupby.ananya
    @makeupby.ananya Před 4 lety

    Can you test out Magnani 1404 watercolor paper series? I have all the three textures and I am not sure if I like it even if it is 300gsm 100% cotton paper.

  • @paulpainter4421
    @paulpainter4421 Před 2 lety

    Interesting video. I have been painting for decades, but the problem I find with 100% cotton, is it is not as forgiving as a cotton mix paper. I work in extreme detail and find the paper does not like fine detail. Can’t help thinking that a paper with different mixes you get broader results. Much harder to produce high professional and fine results with 100% cotton.

    • @teohyc
      @teohyc  Před 2 lety

      The performance depends very much on the sizing. 100% cotton paper without sizing won't work well with watercolour. So cotton content alone doesn't determine performance. For extreme fine detail, hotpress paper works great.

    • @paulpainter4421
      @paulpainter4421 Před 2 lety

      Yes I agree. Cotton paper is not refined as much, but as say, a smoother surface is best for detail. Thank you for replying.

  • @iri5505
    @iri5505 Před 2 lety

    Hello. On not cotton or 50/50cotton when i put second layer of paint over first one- it lift up first layer.is it paper ?

  • @jamesgriffith8767
    @jamesgriffith8767 Před rokem

    I bought some Canson XL Watercolor paper 140lb 300g. I know the paper is crap but I bought some DS watercolor ground to make the paper a little closer to perfect. What percentage of cotton is Canson XL Watercolor Paper? if you know will you comment. Anyone comment.

    • @teohyc
      @teohyc  Před rokem

      Cotton content alone does not make perfect watercolour paper. The amount of sizing and how the sizing is applied also matters a lot. When it doubt, go with the tested brands such as Arches, Fabriano Artistico, Lanaquarrelle

    • @jeebus_gaming
      @jeebus_gaming Před rokem

      Cason XL is a cellulose paper, so no cotton

  • @PaintinHiding
    @PaintinHiding Před 4 lety +1

    YESS! loved this, thank you so much for making this review~ i've always wondered if i can go cheaper by using 25 or 50% cotton. 25% cotton looks rather useless. 50% might be okay for me, i'll try it out :D do you know if the fabriano disegno5 is same as your fabriano5?
    also... did you know Thailand has Thai-made watercolours too? They have student and artist grade watercolours called Silpakorn and Wichitrong, respectively. I don't currently have the artist grade range but I do have a set of the student grade one. I’m making a few dot cards of the Silpakorn watercolours. I'd love to send it to you so you can try it out, maybe make a vid on it. I don't know how I could send it to you. If you're interested, please let me know. :)

    • @sugandha1012
      @sugandha1012 Před 4 lety +2

      Paint in Hiding on the other, i really like using 25% cotton Fabriano! The thing is, it is all about personal choice. Nothing is bad about about any of these as long as you know how to make all the characteristics work according to your style :)

    • @kangdadang5825
      @kangdadang5825 Před 2 lety

      @@sugandha1012 yes

  • @carlusmason2662
    @carlusmason2662 Před 3 lety

    Why is there no video that shows how cotton paper performs in an inkjet?

  • @livres1939
    @livres1939 Před 3 lety

    That was helpful thank you…

  • @jillbartos8893
    @jillbartos8893 Před 4 lety

    Another interesting video Teoh. Have you tried Fluid 100 (cotton)? Even though it's cotton, I don't get the same results as I do with Arches, Fab Artistico and Canson Heritage. I think the sizing might be different. Thanks for sharing!

    • @teohyc
      @teohyc  Před 4 lety

      I’ve not tried those before

    • @jillbartos8893
      @jillbartos8893 Před rokem

      @À Strand It's been a long time since I used Fluid 100 CP, however at the time I painted a bird using the wet-in-wet technique and found that the paint didn't flow well on it, lots of hard edges from what I remember. It seemed to have less or different sizing than other cotton papers I tried. I repeated the painting on Stonehenge Aqua CP using the same paints (QOR) and brushes, and it worked much better. But you might have different results, many people use and like Fluid 100, I'm just not one of them. Also I used a block and I've heard that sometimes sheets of paper can be somewhat different than the same paper in a block. Here's a video by Meow Meow Kapow and she talks about how thirsty the paper is (and that it is light on sizing) so there's less time to move the paint about which is why I had difficulty: ttps://czcams.com/video/t6jVb-lWI7w/video.html. Hope this helps!

  • @secretchildprayers
    @secretchildprayers Před 3 lety

    Hi Teoh, have you tried Clairefontaine's Watercolor paper? Any idea if they are good watercolour paper?

    • @teohyc
      @teohyc  Před 3 lety

      I've not tried that brand so I can't say much

  • @iamsofuckingmad
    @iamsofuckingmad Před 3 lety +1

    0:41 Quanto è bello vedere la scritta "Made in Italy" in un video in Inglese.

  • @aylinbegum5744
    @aylinbegum5744 Před 4 lety +1

    I would like to see this Fluid paper painted with gouache

    • @KD-hw6uw
      @KD-hw6uw Před 4 lety +1

      It’s great for gouache! I use it a lot for that

    • @aylinbegum5744
      @aylinbegum5744 Před 4 lety

      @@KD-hw6uw Thank you for the information ✨

    • @aylinbegum5744
      @aylinbegum5744 Před 4 lety

      @@KD-hw6uw unfortunately it is too expensive to order from Amazon com or other. I am located in France 🙁.

  • @WalnutDave
    @WalnutDave Před 4 lety

    do you still recommend Daniel Smith Watercolour Essential Set for a first pro set of watercolours?

    • @teohyc
      @teohyc  Před 4 lety +1

      It’s a good set. Do compare with Mission Gold 9 tube set price

    • @WalnutDave
      @WalnutDave Před 4 lety

      thanks

  • @grown-ups9083
    @grown-ups9083 Před 4 lety

    Hello brother... Please reply... Urgent:
    I need a tablet for note taking and watching lectures only.
    Should i go with Samsung gab S6 lite or ipad 7 or any other in same range?
    Your opinion?

    • @teohyc
      @teohyc  Před 4 lety

      Both are good. Samsung is more worth the money since pen is included.

    • @grown-ups9083
      @grown-ups9083 Před 4 lety

      @@teohyc the screen size would be enough to make notes and watching the video side by side on the same screen?
      I haven't used a tablet before...

    • @teohyc
      @teohyc  Před 4 lety +1

      @@grown-ups9083 Two things on the same screen is possible with Samsung. But each screen will be smaller. Like half since each.

  • @grannieannie1371
    @grannieannie1371 Před 2 lety

    I hate soft edges as it makes my flowers look dodgy for my style. To a degree it depends on your style.

  • @jasonmullins6638
    @jasonmullins6638 Před 4 lety

    I stopped using Arches because when you add water..the paper (glue I guess) starts to smell. Also bought a block of arches cold.press and something was wrong with the paper. It literally acted like a sponge and could not spread or blend colors..at all...a bad block..and for what I paid!? Pass on Arches

    • @teohyc
      @teohyc  Před 4 lety +1

      Sizing could have gone bad. This happens when paper is too old and has soaked out moisture from the air.

    • @jasonmullins6638
      @jasonmullins6638 Před 4 lety

      @@teohyc maybe! It had to have been too old on the shelves of the artstore because i used it right away

  • @ooga60
    @ooga60 Před 4 lety +1

    paper

  • @ChrissieNicely
    @ChrissieNicely Před 4 lety

    Thank you! 😍