Product Description – Smooth Pearl 280
PermaJet Smooth Pearl 280 is an instant dry inkjet paper with a subtle pearl finish. It has a natural white/warm base tint that makes it ideal for skin tones, portraiture studios, landscape photography and art reproductions. The superb smooth surface with its refined pearl finish gives the feeling of luxury found in more expensive papers. Smooth Pearl 280 has an exceptional Dmax, capable of producing deep blacks and wide tonal range, suited for both monochrome and colour work.
This resin coated digital photo paper has a 280gsm weight that will feed effortlessly through any inkjet printer whilst still having a high-quality feel to hand. Its UV protective, microporous supercoat adds a high level of resistance to moisture and fading, ensuring your photographs and artwork look fantastic for years to come.
📥 Download the PermaJet Smooth Pearl 280 Technical Data Sheet
🖊 Check out Mike McNammee’s Review of Smooth Pearl 280
Key Features & Benefits
- Resin coated, microporous inkjet paper
- Instant dry pearl/lustre surface
- 280gsm weight with natural/warm base tint
- UV and water resistant
- Ideal choice for images with wide tonal range
- Excellent for studio’s requiring natural skin tones
- Compatible with dye and pigment inks
- Works with any inkjet printer
Base Whitepoint Indicator – Learn More
Smooth Pearl 280 is Perfect For. . .
- Daily printing where a warmer base is preferred
- Portraits with smooth skin tones
- Fans of the original Ilford Smooth Pearl
“When we changed paper suppliers and started using PermaJet paper, we initially used Oyster 271gsm. We were very happy with the look and finish but found for our type of work Smooth Pearl 280gsm with the slightly creamy paper base suited our product better, the photo paper has a fantastic tonal range that enhances the look perfectly for our old photographs we reproduce at The Francis Frith Collection. We are very impressed with the customer service, paper quality & cost from Imaging Warehouse and would recommend them whole heartedly.”
– Angela Dixon-Payne, The Francis Frith Collection