It is also a paper that competes directly against one of my favorite papers, Epson Hot Press Bright. It's a great paper with saturated colors and dark blacks. This does mean it's a bit more prone to scuffing, however, so keep that in mind with handling the paper. This paper is one of the smoothest papers I've ever used. When Hahnemühle says "Ultra Smooth," they really mean it. It also has less of a warm tone than the Photo Rag Satin paper.įirstly, I did not experience the same off-angle color casting with this paper as I did with the Photo Rag Satin paper. This very smooth paper produces great results with better off-angle viewing than the Photo Rag Satin paper. Image of a print on Photo Rag Ultra Smooth paper. Overall, this is a good paper with only one thing holding it back from being great, in my opinion. With that said, this paper provides a good balance between the overall look and feel of a matte paper with the inky blacks of a glossy paper. This might not matter for some applications, but when I am printing an image for hanging on a wall, I want it to look great from every angle. While the paper is quite neutral when viewing it directly, it takes on a slightly magenta color cast, particularly in dark areas of the print, when you view it from the side. I'm not enamored with how it looks off-angle, however. When looking at a Photo Rag Satin print straight on, it looks great. Blacks are very deep, image details are well-rendered, and colors are very vibrant. I really like the look and feel of this paper and its print quality is mostly very good. The Photo Rag Satin paper has a subtle texture (I'd place its texture somewhere between William Turner and Museum Etching) that does show up in light areas of a print. The texture of this paper is very evident with this particular print. Nonetheless, when you're looking for a heavily-textured matte paper, I think that you're going to be hard-pressed to find a better one than this.Įxtreme close-up of print on Photo Rag Satin paper. This texture is a double-edged sword, however, because it shows up quite heavily on lighter areas of a print, which may not be desired. In addition to printing fine details well, the William Turner paper's texture also adds an additional appearance of detail and depth. Not only are the colors and tones excellent, but detail is great too. Color prints are very vibrant with no bleeding whatsoever. Black and white prints are neutral and the blacks are very black. Print quality itself is very good with this paper. Its stiffness also makes loading it into the Epson P800 I used particularly easy. The paper itself feels great, it is thick and the textured matte surface helps to make the paper feel substantial. In the detailied areas of the print, the texture sort of fades into the image and can enhance the appearance of sharpness, fine detail, and depth. You can really see the texture of the paper in the darker, out of focus areas of this print. Nonetheless, I am going to discuss each of the six papers I printed on in 11 x 17" size, just be aware that Hahnemühle makes many more kinds of paper and I'm confident that all of their papers will live up to their name.Įxtreme close-up of print on William Turner paper. After all, companies don't stay in business for over 400 years without producing a good product. This is serious paper with strict quality control standards, so you can expect any Hahnemühle paper you use to be high quality. Further, each paper that I tested is acid-free and meets the highest archival standards. I have been able to test the following fine art Hahnemühle papers: William Turner, Museum Etching, Photo Rag Satin, Photo Rag Ultra Smooth, FineArt Pearl, and FineArt Baryta Satin.Įach type of Hahnemühle paper I printed on provided excellent results and a very high-quality look and feel. I was sent various sample packs of paper to test by Hahnemühle, eventually settling on six paper products to test using 11 x 17" sheets. Yes, you read that date correctly, Germany's oldest paper maker has been making paper since the late 16th century. German paper-maker Hahnemühle has been making paper since 1584.
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