Inkjet paper substrates can be broadly divided into three main
types, and some papers are made from a mixture of types. Basically, the
more cotton a paper has in it, the stronger it is. Cheaper papers are
made from wood pulp. Plastic 'papers' are an emerging alternative, and
are appearing in high gloss papers coming to market at this time.
Cotton Rag
papers were originally made, literally, from the remains of cotton rags, waste from the 'rag trade' fashion industry. These days plantation cotton is used. Cotton has
long, strong fibres, and consequently papers made from cotton are very
strong. These papers are expensive, but the ultimate in quality. Being
so strong, and naturally acid and lignin free, they are considered the
most archival of papers, making them the most suitable for work in the
gallery/museum, and sales context.
Wood Pulp
papers are the lower quality, weaker papers (most Epson papers are wood
pulp papers). The wood pulp fibers are shorter and less strong than
cotton fibres, so this paper tears and degrades more easily. Wood pulp
papers are not generally considered to be archival (for example, in the
U.S. the paper Epson Archival Matte must be sold as Epson Enhanced
Matte as it is not archival by Library of Congress standards). If using
a wood pulp paper, look for one that is 100% alpha cellulose wood pulp
- i.e. the highest quality pulp. Wood pulp papers can be ok for
proofing, but should probably be avoided in the gallery/museum and
sales markets.
Plastics are also used in
some 'papers' as the paper base. Older processes like Cibachrome and
more modern papers like Kodak Endura Metallic use a 'paper' that has a
polyester base - so they are not really a paper at all, really a
plastic. Plastics can be manufactured to be extremely smooth, making
plastic based papers very suitable to the construction of super high
gloss papers. Currently on the Australian Market there is no paper
quite like this available for inkjet printing, but some are due to
appear shortly - stay tuned!