Over recent weeks I’ve been in the papermaking studio creating some new sheets for myself.
At the end of June my friend Dinah and myself pulped some unidentified plant fibre which quickly disintegrated and we had to add some other white pulp to the beater to produce something usable. I showed images of it here. I’ve now pulled some sheets from it as well as other pulp in the studio.

The top sheets are from the plant fibre/cotton rag pulp mix. The bottom row shows, from left to right: denim paper (from jeans), green hessian paper (from a hessian cushion cover), some hessian fibre mixed with yellow recycled folders, and finally just recycled yellow folders paper.
You’d think the paper from cardstock folders would be more vibrant as they are brightly coloured before we use them. However, I’ve found that many folders, when torn, are actually white inside – the colour is only a coating. So once they are shredded and pulped they often end up a lighter creamy tint of their original exterior. That’s what has happened in the ‘yellow’ papers shown here. In my case, it makes them more usable than bright primary coloured sheets.





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