I've recently been thinking about how to possibly create a colour lith print (that is, a print with the characteristics of a lith print in terms of "texture " and tone, but you know, in colour) and while doing some gum printing recently I realised that - other than hand-colouring lith prints - it may be possible to make a tri-colour gum over lith.
And off I went to experiment, first making a lith print from a K layer digital negative, and then coating my first layer of gum over the top. All this seemed to go perfectly fine and using my usual gum process, and a negative I've used before, I got the density of colour I liked, so stopped washing and hung up the print to dry ready for the next layer. But when I returned to my print I realise that the entire colour layer, rather than drying, had simply run off and was now puddled on my bathroom floor.
So my thinking now is, would fixed photo paper need to be re-sized to take a gum layer? Or could this be an exposure problem?
I've never done gum on fixed out photo paper, but assumed that like carbon printing it would be fine as is and wouldn't need to be sized.
p.s.
I'm assuming this question hasn't come up before and sorry if it has.. but I have been following along the thread since it began way back, but and to be perfectly honest, this morning I'm feeling a little too lazy to read back from the start : ) )