How to Stretch Watercolour Paper
How to Stretch Watercolour
Paper.
Watercolour is often stretched to prevent ‘cockling’, a distortion of
the paper due to uneven applications of water during painting. It is not always
necessary - if you only use light washes or work on very heavy paper for
instance. However, stretching your paper allows you to work wetter without the
fear of a distorted surface. It’s a simple process but you need to allow plenty
of drying time.
You will need; -
·
A bath or large tray for soaking the paper. Clean and
grease free.
·
Clean water!
·
Sturdy flat board (I use sealed MDF). Clean and grease
free.
·
Large clean, grease free sponge.
·
Gummed parcel tape – the type you wet and stick.
·
A place to dry the stretched paper flat.
Process.
1. Soak your
watercolour sheet in tepid or cool water – you are aiming to soak the paper
evenly so the soak time will vary with the thickness of the paper (I use very heavy
paper so usually soak for an hour).
2.
Carefully remove the soaked paper, handle as little as
possible, and lay centrally on your stretching board. You can remove excess
water with a clean sponge.
3.
Use the gummed tape to stick down the edges. Start
with the top edge, make sure the gummed tape comes at least 2 centimetres onto
the paper, and then tape down the bottom edge in the same way. Then tape the
side edges onto the board. If you don’t over lap enough tape onto the paper,
the paper with pull away from the tape.
4.
Leave the board somewhere flat to dry – somewhere the cat won’t sit on it!
5. When dry
your paper is ready to use!
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