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camtec

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Does anyone know of a source for Forte polywarmtone Art Fiber base paper? I am a colorist using Marshal oils to paint photos. Recommendations for other fiber based papers that absorb oils would be appreciated also.
 

eddie

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I do a lot of hand painting on the Ilford MGIV matte. I also use their warmtone semi-matte.
 

mnemosyne

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Does anyone know of a source for Forte polywarmtone Art Fiber base paper? I am a colorist using Marshal oils to paint photos. Recommendations for other fiber based papers that absorb oils would be appreciated also.

Apart from a lucky find of old stock at the usual place your only hope would be The Polywarmtone Project
 
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camtec

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Thanks Eddie. May I suggest Ilford's multigrade art 300 paper. It is fiber based and holds oils very well. Ektalure it ain't, but it is the best I have found since Forte went under. It is made by Hahnemuhle and sold by Ilford.
 
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camtec

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Thanks Michael, I'll give it a try. Does it absorb oils well?
 

Michael W

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Thanks Michael, I'll give it a try. Does it absorb oils well?
This is Marshalls photo oils on Foma 123. Was easy to work with.
123-hand-colour-blog.jpg
 

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Dear Camtec,

May have just been a typo....but.

ILFORD ART300 is made and coated at Mobberley by HARMAN technology Limited on a base made exclusively for HARMAN by Hahnemuehle ( and a lovely base it is as well ) whilst it is a 'Fibre base' technically it is a 'fine art' base adjusted to have 'wet strength' for photo processing.

Simon ILFORD Photo / HARMAN technology Limited :
 

Wayne

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(there was a url link here which no longer exists)
 

eddie

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I like the results using Art300, too. Another thing I do is use liquid emulsion on watercolor papers. You can get very textural results, depending on the paper surface.
 

MattKing

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Thanks Eddie. May I suggest Ilford's multigrade art 300 paper. It is fiber based and holds oils very well. Ektalure it ain't, but it is the best I have found since Forte went under. It is made by Hahnemuhle and sold by Ilford.

Not quite correct.

Hahnemuhle makes the underlying paper support. Harman/Ilford then manufactures photographic paper using that support and their emulsion coating techniques.

Oops - Simon beat me to it.

I've seen this confusion before, and think that it arises from the listing descriptions at places like B & H
 

pentaxuser

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Time somebody commented on Michael W's hand colouring on Foma 123. Not much to be said really except one word - Brilliant

pentaxuser
 
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camtec

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Very good Michael. Do you tone your prints before coloring them? To those who corrected me, thanks for the info.
 

Michael W

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Very good Michael. Do you tone your prints before coloring them? To those who corrected me, thanks for the info.
That one wasn't toned & I haven't coloured a print for a while. Could be a good thing to try however.
 

Xmas

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Time somebody commented on Michael W's hand colouring on Foma 123. Not much to be said really except one word - Brilliant

pentaxuser

real nice

Is there a step be step on site or book?

Noel
 

Simonh82

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I've not really come across this technique before. In my mind I thought it would look much more like painting by numbers.

Michael W's example is beautiful. Much more subtle than I was expecting and still very much a photo. Really lovely effect that I will look in to more.

Thanks for sharing.
 
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camtec

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To get realistic skin tones in portraits, I first sepia or brown tone photos first.
 
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