BenjaminAustin
Subscriber
- Joined
- Oct 5, 2010
- Messages
- 23
- Format
- Multi Format
Hi Gummists 
I'm fairly new to gum printing and therefore making all the mistakes possible all at once. Partly due to what may be the inherent unpredictability of gum printing, and partly because I'm impatient and constantly change multiple things at once.
So. For you new gummists and others who may have problems getting good and consistent coatings - I thought I'd relate my experiences and solution.
I'm based in sydney which (of late) has been relatively dry - so it has be hard to get a good even emulsion coating.
I started by slowly and gently foam brushing a coating which seemed like the best way forward, according to the interwebs - resulting in FAIL.
Heres how it went
1.
Method : Foam brush, gently and slowly in even strokes, first down then across.
Result : Gum set up too quickly and didn't smooth out, streaks, fisheyes, gum inconsistently washed off the paper depending on how thick it was in that area.
2.
Method : Hake brush, gently and slowly in even strokes, first down then across.
Result : Same thing. Gum set up too quickly, streaks, fisheyes, gum inconsistently washed off the paper.
3.
Method : Foam Roller, down then across in relatively quick movements.
Result : Great! for the first roll. Then as the roller gets wetter, it gets more inconsistent and has a nasty texture. Emulsion sets at different thicknesses over the print area and washes off inconsistently. again.
4.
Method : Screen printing screen and squeegee.
Result : God I thought I was clever doing this. It even looked great till I peeled the paper from the screen The emulsion is too runny for this to work. Emulsion pools and streaks as you remove it from the screen. (I really wanted this to work... if anyone has tried it and got it to work - let me know)
5.
Method : Glass Coating Rod.
Result : Once again. Feeling very clever. I got pretty good results really, but it was messy, its hard to get consistency, I kept dropping and dripping and so on. The paper buckles and the emulsion pools before it sets up. Don't bother.
6.
Method : Get depressed and go back to reading.
Result : Read Walter Zimmermans gum printing guide from Photo Miniature 1910 they talk about but don't link to on Bostick and Sullivan tech pages. (Here it is on google books)
Get excited again and try something he suggests
7.
Method : Foam brush emulsion application and a dry hake brush for smoothing.
Result. AWESOME. Even, consistent, smooth, no fisheyes.
Get the emulsion on QUICKLY with the foam brush. You can be a little splodgy and imperfect at this stage. Then, as soon as you have finished, with even more urgency, just as Zimmerman describes, use the dry hake brush like you see archaeologists brush away dust from fossils. Its all in the wrist.
Whew. I was going mad.
Really. Its hard to learn all these techniques from written accounts only. I wish there were more videos on the web.
Anyway. I hope this helps someone. (I think its partly me just barking like a lonely dog into the night - I haven't got anyone to talk to about my gum obsession)
Thanks for reading
B

I'm fairly new to gum printing and therefore making all the mistakes possible all at once. Partly due to what may be the inherent unpredictability of gum printing, and partly because I'm impatient and constantly change multiple things at once.
So. For you new gummists and others who may have problems getting good and consistent coatings - I thought I'd relate my experiences and solution.
I'm based in sydney which (of late) has been relatively dry - so it has be hard to get a good even emulsion coating.
I started by slowly and gently foam brushing a coating which seemed like the best way forward, according to the interwebs - resulting in FAIL.
Heres how it went
1.
Method : Foam brush, gently and slowly in even strokes, first down then across.
Result : Gum set up too quickly and didn't smooth out, streaks, fisheyes, gum inconsistently washed off the paper depending on how thick it was in that area.
2.
Method : Hake brush, gently and slowly in even strokes, first down then across.
Result : Same thing. Gum set up too quickly, streaks, fisheyes, gum inconsistently washed off the paper.
3.
Method : Foam Roller, down then across in relatively quick movements.
Result : Great! for the first roll. Then as the roller gets wetter, it gets more inconsistent and has a nasty texture. Emulsion sets at different thicknesses over the print area and washes off inconsistently. again.
4.
Method : Screen printing screen and squeegee.
Result : God I thought I was clever doing this. It even looked great till I peeled the paper from the screen The emulsion is too runny for this to work. Emulsion pools and streaks as you remove it from the screen. (I really wanted this to work... if anyone has tried it and got it to work - let me know)
5.
Method : Glass Coating Rod.
Result : Once again. Feeling very clever. I got pretty good results really, but it was messy, its hard to get consistency, I kept dropping and dripping and so on. The paper buckles and the emulsion pools before it sets up. Don't bother.
6.
Method : Get depressed and go back to reading.
Result : Read Walter Zimmermans gum printing guide from Photo Miniature 1910 they talk about but don't link to on Bostick and Sullivan tech pages. (Here it is on google books)
Get excited again and try something he suggests
7.
Method : Foam brush emulsion application and a dry hake brush for smoothing.
Result. AWESOME. Even, consistent, smooth, no fisheyes.
Get the emulsion on QUICKLY with the foam brush. You can be a little splodgy and imperfect at this stage. Then, as soon as you have finished, with even more urgency, just as Zimmerman describes, use the dry hake brush like you see archaeologists brush away dust from fossils. Its all in the wrist.
Whew. I was going mad.
Really. Its hard to learn all these techniques from written accounts only. I wish there were more videos on the web.
Anyway. I hope this helps someone. (I think its partly me just barking like a lonely dog into the night - I haven't got anyone to talk to about my gum obsession)
Thanks for reading

B