This is where I have purchased "vellum" in the past.
They call it "plasticized cotton", "modern vellum", or "paper vellum".
It is good stuff; takes a lot of abuse, and is not affected by moisture/sweat/etc. very much.
You can get it wet and it will not degrade.
You can iron it if it gets wrinkled.
Paper vellum is translucent, so good for tracing over other drawings.
The translucence was important because you ran the vellum through the blue-line reproduction machine on top of photo-sensitive paper.
Normal paper is not translucent enough to work in the blue-line machine.
The trick was to turn on the blue line machine, and then hold your breath long enough to make a print, so the amonia fumes did not destroy your lungs. Generally your eyes would burner pretty good if you had to make more than one print.
https://www.engineersupply.com/vellums-for-wide-format-inkjet-printers.aspx
.
They call it "plasticized cotton", "modern vellum", or "paper vellum".
It is good stuff; takes a lot of abuse, and is not affected by moisture/sweat/etc. very much.
You can get it wet and it will not degrade.
You can iron it if it gets wrinkled.
Paper vellum is translucent, so good for tracing over other drawings.
The translucence was important because you ran the vellum through the blue-line reproduction machine on top of photo-sensitive paper.
Normal paper is not translucent enough to work in the blue-line machine.
The trick was to turn on the blue line machine, and then hold your breath long enough to make a print, so the amonia fumes did not destroy your lungs. Generally your eyes would burner pretty good if you had to make more than one print.
https://www.engineersupply.com/vellums-for-wide-format-inkjet-printers.aspx
.
Last edited: