back in the day, (before photography) prints were limited because the copper, steel, or zinc plate would fail, or the litho stone would lose information. By fail I mean the first print pulled would have information on it that the last ones did not have. With photography, light shinning through it, does not degrade negative. so in theory you can make a zillion prints if your chemistry, time, and temp. stays the same. most people change out the chemistry every so often "to keep it real" as they say. . . . . Some people who make limited additions of the negative have a "strike plate" or image that shows "the original" being altered or partially destroyed or fully destroyed and make a print of that. Many photags do not like to destroy their negatives. They keep an "open" addition. so you just keep numbering them, , ,1,2,3,4,5,6 and so on. . . . . if you make a strike plate then you can number them 1/10, 2/10, 3/10 and so on . . . .. IF you do not have a strike plate, then it is misleading to say you have 1/10,2/10, and so on.because tomorrow or the next day, you can print more because your "original" is still quite nice and has not been tampered with. If its limited, then make it limited, If its not limited, do not say that it is. Its like Jeep wrangler being "limited" its mass produced!!! how absurd!