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๐ Elevate Your Art Game with Canson XL!
The Canson XL Series Watercolor Pad features 30 heavyweight sheets of 140lb cold press paper, measuring 11x15 inches. Designed for artists of all levels, it supports a variety of watercolor techniques while ensuring vibrant colors and durability. Manufactured in France, this pad combines tradition with quality, making it a favorite among students and professionals.



















| ASIN | B0049UXGD0 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #1,897 in Arts, Crafts & Sewing ( See Top 100 in Arts, Crafts & Sewing ) #13 in Watercolor Paper |
| Brand | Canson |
| Brand Name | Canson |
| Color | White |
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 out of 5 stars 7,266 Reviews |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 03148955726280 |
| Item Dimensions L x W | 20"L x 15"W |
| Item Type Name | Watercolor Paper Pads |
| Item Weight | 2.4 Pounds |
| Manufacturer | Canson |
| Material | Paper |
| Material Type | Paper |
| Paper Dimensions | 15 x 20 Inches |
| Paper Finish | Watercolor |
| Paper Weight | 30 |
| Product Dimensions | 20"L x 15"W |
| Recommended Uses For Product | Painting, Watercolors |
| Sheet Count | 30 |
| Unit Count | 30.0 Count |
| Warranty Description | No warranty. |
N**S
Dependable Pulp Watercolor Paper
This is one of the most common brands of budget watercolor paper, and itโs easy to see why. Itโs pulp paper rather than cotton, but for the price and availability it does a good job. The sizing is consistent across the sheets Iโve used, so there arenโt distracting patches or spots where the paint reacts unpredictably. Itโs not the same as working on a cotton sheet, but it performs reliably for what I use it for and is more than fine for practice, studies, and comic work. Iโve use this mainly for ink wash comic pages, and itโs held up pretty much as expected. Even though itโs cold press paper, itโs almost like hot press, smooth enough to comfortably draw on with pencil or pen before applying washes. That makes it a good and cheaper alternative to bristol if you want to combine line art with washes while keeping the tooth of watercolor paper. The surface doesnโt fight your tools, so sketching, inking, and then washing over the lines is very workable. If you trim an inch from the 11-inch side, you get an 10ร15 sheet, which lines up with standard American comic work area dimensions on an 11x17 sheet. That makes it easy to integrate into comic workflows without too much extra adjustments, and it saves time when prepping pages for scanning or print. You can go right out to the edge and make borders in post (the digital process). The weight can handle moderate water applications without immediately breaking down, but it will start to peel with heavier washes, but once dry it usually settles enough to keep working. For ink wash especially, itโs reliable and has the right feel under the brush. The paper takes general layering and lifting decently, though like all pulp papers it has limits if you push it too hard. Itโs not premium stock, but itโs dependable, versatile, and easy to find. For people working on comics, ink wash, or just everyday watercolor practice, itโs a good pad to have on hand. โNathyn Brendan Masters Night Phoenix Press
A**R
LOVE THIS PAD! TOP VALUE PURCHASE.
This is one of the best deals I've seen on watercolor paper. This is excellent paper at a terrific price. I started doing watercolor again recently after about 25 years' haitus. As you can imagine, brands and types of papers, paints, and other watercolor supplies have grown exponentially since I last did watercolor, so I had to buy several different brands and types of paper before I found the one I love. THIS IS IT, in case that wasn't already clear. It has the perfect balance of texture and uniformity in both finish and thickness without the typical roughness of other mid-grade cold-pressed papers. Plus, it accepts both color and wash beautifully and consistently. It's also heavy enough to not warp/buckle much when you do extensive color washing without taping. That's not to say it DOESN'T buckle at all, but I lay down tons of water on some of my prints and also never tape my paper down before I start to work. Have to say: I am really impressed with how little this warps, all that considered....even with heavy water dumps. ***BTW:**** The easiest remedy for the warping and buckling, I've found, is to let the work completely dry--24 hours, on the safe side--then turn it, face down, onto an ironing board with a firm piece of clean, unbent high-density cardboard that's larger than my print so I can iron it flat. I iron my work gently, with the iron set between "low cotton" and "low linen", depending on the amount of buckling. I also use the lowest setting of steam on my iron. Because it really helps to quickly even out wash-warping. Works much better than pre-taping!
A**R
Good quality for reasonable price
I do watercolor painting with my kids every week and I believe high quality materials are important (even for kids!) when they are learning. After shopping around and trying a few different brands, this is the highest quality for the best price. It does not pill easily which is important when you're working with kids who have a tendency to "scrub" the paper with their brush. Holds up great for wet on wet technique.
M**B
Affordable Quality Paper
I love Canson papers. As I long time user, I can attest to the quality of their papers. I appreciate this watercolor paper for its texture, quality, absorbency and non-buckling features. Yes, low buckling. I also use this for wax pencils and it works great. I have the Arches brand as well, but, unfortunately it buckles so badly that I tend to default to Canson every time. I canโt speak for every artist because paper is a personal preference. Just speaking about my experiences with Canson and it doesnโt disappoint.
S**D
good enough
Good water color paper for the price, just know it wont function like 100% cotton water color paper. I use it for multi media, swatches and practice/test work. It's able to take a beating, thick and has a smoother texture on one side than the other.
M**A
Best watercolour paper ever
Best watercolour paper. It is a little pricey. But I have tried so many brands and this is the best one out there. Instead of wasting your money of other brand, get your bucks worth with this one. Rips out easily, great texture for watercolour too.
E**A
great quality for the price
Great quality for the price. I work mostly with watercolor on paper and do buy more expensive paper at times. But I come back to this one often. I am super picky when it comes to watercolor paper. Since the price is so reasonable I feel freer to experiment when using this paper. This paper never disappoints.
I**R
It's either perfect or meh depending on what you're trying to do with it
If you're planning, as I was, to make a watercolor sketchbook with this, it's grain short, with the grain running parallel to the 11 inch side. Even so, and even with the glue being on the short edge, this falls apart quite easily, a plus for me because that means no tearing. A minus if you intend to keep the book intact. If you want the best paper out there, go with Arches. If you plan to do the curriculum with Watercolor College, Chris Lyonn, the instructor, has stated if you're in the US, just go get that. I tried this on a lark, and he's not wrong. It can't do the things Arches can, for the techniques in that class. That said, if you're painting with Sarah Cray over at Let's Make Art, this is the exact paper she uses, or at least used to until they released their home brand, and it works perfectly for everything she teaches. The difference? While both embrace the spontaneous nature of watercolor, especially in things like clouds and trees, Chris avoids blooms and the rough, unblended edges they create. Sarah embraces blooms and the visual interest they provide. This paper makes it easier to get, harder to avoid, blooms. Chris works with natural pigment tube and pan based paints from brands like Winsor and Newton and Daniel Smith, favoring the lightfast properties and colors more suited to realistic paintings. Sarah favors dye-based liquid watercolors from brands like Dr. Ph Martins for their brighter colors better suited to illustrative painting. This works better with those dye-based paints, not as well with the tube and pan. So it's either perfect or meh, depending on your intention. Additionally, this is popular with the urban sketch crowd because it is a stable, strong paper that can put up with a lot of reworking the under drawing without damage to the paper fibers. If that's what you are looking for, then this is a great choice. That's my planned use for it, once it's in a sketchbook form. That property of ease of reworking makes it ideal for beginners.
P**A
Good
Perfect quality, intense paper, I put a couple of layers and it keeps the water perfectly
M**.
Awesome pad, awesome material, awesome price
The material of the paper itself is really awesome and suit all levels of artistic issues, really love it.
L**N
Quality plus.
Bought for Christmas present for my sister. She loves it. High quality
H**Y
Inspiring the upcoming artist
Remarkably, good product, it is like how it was described. The only negative comment would be put the product in better packaging as the corners had come little bent
T**Y
Looks good
Great value. Prompt delivery. Not used as yet but looks promising.
Trustpilot
2 months ago
2 days ago