pekelnik
Member
- Joined
- Nov 18, 2011
- Messages
- 84
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You need to keep the paper damp during the inking as Clive says. The basis for the process is the relief (the proportionally tanned gelatine). If the gelatine gets really saturated with water you should be able to actually feel this relief. If it dries out, the relief goes away and with it gone you get no differentiation and thus only flat colour.
Instead of me recapitulating the books, I think the most sensible way is to a) watch the Joy Goldkind video and b) get down to reading at least one of the books mentioned.
Another idea is this - try using liquid emulsion on watercolour paper, as described here in this book: http://www.blurb.com/b/3544067-bromoil-printing-using-liquid-emulsion-as-base
Gandolfi is a member here and maybe he can chime in a bit about his methods.
Keep on going - you will succeed. Don't give up!
I did all of the above with the exception of coating my own paper. I can try that too as I have emulsion, but I'd prefer not to to be honest.
I can try soaking longer, but if I get no result after half an hour in 25 degree water, I don't see how soaking it for 5 hours would help. I'm not drying it after I take it out, I just wipe off water pools with a wet paper towel.
On the plus side, I feel that my inking technique is pretty good by now

Here is the last attempt:
After first light coat

After second coat:

Note that the only thing shown immediately is what looks like damage to the top layer, I do not know what from.
Thanks for all the help so far. I think next step would be to replace fix with hypo and perhaps try something like rodinal or XTOL for developer. (My options are rather limited, everything takes a lot of time and I need to adhere to relatively strict disposal rules.)