Micheal
thanks for your response and I will appreciate any and all help you can give me.
The Arches Platine is specifically for the inkjets as you have pointed out.
I certainly will post my findings/faults/mistakes.
Our clients want the fancy decel edge to verify they are artists and though I do like the look of this paper with inkjet I think sizing will allow me to adhere more ink on the paper.
Regarding the multiple printing with gum or carbon I am not sure what route I will go, A friend of mine in town prints multiple carbon onto a mylar type substance in reverse and then transfers the whole package to paper in one application and it works well for him.
He does full colour reproduction work that is quite stunning, Sandy King and Mark Nelson held a workshop here and I brought my friend in to show his work over an lunch period.
I am not convinced that I will go the full colour route but maybe just selective colours to accent a scene much like the hand colouring processes . Where you get the idea of colour, but it is not full realism.Therefore a robust paper will be needed but I am not sure I will be hitting it with four emergences in fluid.
I will certainly keep in touch as I start working with the larger films and papers.
I have moved my plate burners into the main darkroom and am installing a heavy duty AR and Humidity control system before I go forward .
Sandy will appreciate it the next time he comes to Toronto , as the last time humidity held them back.
BTW what is ARS paper?
Bob,
I believe Platine is unsuitable for multiple process printing, because it has a bit of a shrinkage problem. It doesn't shrink consistently in both directions, and apparently preshrinking may not help solver the problem. Should work fine in the printer, though, but I haven't tried it. ARS may work great for what you are thinking.
Sizing won't solve the shrinkage problem. It will help keep gum/carbon from staining the paper fibers, thus permitting a 'paper white' to occur on prints where they are desired.
At the sizes you are discussing, even the most suitable paper will probably need to be pre-shrunk. Maybe even twice. Humidity control in the paper is a problem that you need to pay attention to as well.
This is all a part of what most gum printers do, so anyone who does them (like me) can go through the process with you effectively.
---Michael