I've got it in DIN A4 and it's long grain which would be the wrong direction, actually. XD But I've found that it doesn't cause many problems because of it, likely because it's sold as the "good" copy paper for fine correspondence with great printer compatibility or something. The only time I've had a problem was with the book where I'd forgot the sheets for moisture. I do press the blocks to death, though. XD I would prefer to have paper in the right grain direction but DIN A4 in short grain is super hard to find and also quite expensive. And I'm too lazy to cut up bigger sheets. XD
I usually use those transparent plastic folders/pockets. XD I've got lots of those things. That's worked well so far, but perhaps adding a thin cloth might also be a good idea.
Ugh yeah I've had those problems where the paper basically falls apart or tears easily as long as it's wet with some design papers I use for covers. I get those as scrapbooking blocks because they often have nice designs and are cheap, but it's definitely not the greatest paper quality. The front is usually okay, but cutting the edges folded on the inside... Definitely was a bit of a learning curve to let those particular papers dry some first. XD
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I would prefer to have paper in the right grain direction but DIN A4 in short grain is super hard to find and also quite expensive. And I'm too lazy to cut up bigger sheets. XD
I usually use those transparent plastic folders/pockets. XD I've got lots of those things. That's worked well so far, but perhaps adding a thin cloth might also be a good idea.
Ugh yeah I've had those problems where the paper basically falls apart or tears easily as long as it's wet with some design papers I use for covers. I get those as scrapbooking blocks because they often have nice designs and are cheap, but it's definitely not the greatest paper quality. The front is usually okay, but cutting the edges folded on the inside... Definitely was a bit of a learning curve to let those particular papers dry some first. XD