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photo to canvas
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How can I put my photos onto canvas?? I have got some transfer paper but it's really for cotton/polycotton fabrics etc., Is there another sort of paper/canvas?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.shelby - I always wanted to do that. I have found a few things but the gaps in my knowledge are huge. I asked a similar question but never got a reply.
This is the v small sum of what I know.
You can print directly onto canvas using a special printer Google Epson 9800, if you buy one of these hugely expensive machines you can then buy rolls of canvas and print onto it like you would paper.
I would dearly like to do this but space and expense would prevent it also you have to get it onto a frame which is a skill in itself.
It may be done easier but I cannot find where
This is the v small sum of what I know.
You can print directly onto canvas using a special printer Google Epson 9800, if you buy one of these hugely expensive machines you can then buy rolls of canvas and print onto it like you would paper.
I would dearly like to do this but space and expense would prevent it also you have to get it onto a frame which is a skill in itself.
It may be done easier but I cannot find where
The canvas prints which professional photo studios (as well as some High Street photo processing shops) provide, at horrendous prices, are made using canvas which has been coated with a light-sensitive layer and then exposed in a darkroom. (i.e. they're 'proper' photographs, like the type you get from a film camera, rather than digital ones).
You can't match that quality using an inkjet printer. However you can get reasonably close to it. You need to print directly onto canvas, rather than using a transfer method.
The special type of canvas you require is made by Daler-Rowney, who manufacture art materials (such as oil paints). For that reason, you're far more likely to find it in a specialist art shop, rather than in a stationer's or computer shop. Alternatively, you can buy it online:
http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewIte m&item=250316966676&cguid=1586ea3911f0a0aad372 6542ffd2c022
Chris
You can't match that quality using an inkjet printer. However you can get reasonably close to it. You need to print directly onto canvas, rather than using a transfer method.
The special type of canvas you require is made by Daler-Rowney, who manufacture art materials (such as oil paints). For that reason, you're far more likely to find it in a specialist art shop, rather than in a stationer's or computer shop. Alternatively, you can buy it online:
http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewIte m&item=250316966676&cguid=1586ea3911f0a0aad372 6542ffd2c022
Chris
I would use a photographic lab, like e.g. http:// fotoins ight.co ...as-c anvas-p rints.h tml . Photo labs tend to know best on how to print photographs.