Making Paper
Making paper is a blast, but you have to enjoy messes, getting wet, and splooshing around in pulpy water. If you played in mud puddles as a kid, this is the hobby for you!
(1) Prepping the Felts. The felts are pieces of heavy fabric interfacing that you use to couch (pronounced "cooch") the paper (I'll describe this below). I take my felts outside, put them on a clean surface, and hose them off (in case they have any residual pulp from a previous session), and make sure they are completely wet.
(2) Preparing the Pulp. The dry pulp that came with my kit is easy to cut into pieces and blend in a blender. You just have to make sure you don't put too much pulp in at once and burn out the motor of your blender. I cut the pulp up into 1-inch pieces and fill the blender (loosely) barely to the one-cup line. I mix 2 tablespoons of sizing with a cup of water and pour some of that in the blender with each batch. Then I add water almost to the top, pulse a few times, then blend for about two minutes. I pour that batch into my vat and repeat until I think I have enough pulp for twelve sheets of paper.
(3) Filling the Vat. I get the hose and fill the vat until the water and pulp ratio looks about right. This is something that varies with each kind of pulp. It's best not to add too much water, because, if the mixture is too thin, then you have to blend more pulp. If it's too thick, you can always add more water.