I'm just reading Margaret Harker's history of the Linked Ring, and a few of the plates are labelled Sanguine carbon print.
I can't find any reference to this as a separate process in either of my reference books (Farber, Crawford) or online, but I also know there were dozens of different carbon processes.
It ("sanguine") is a term applied to a reddish-brown colour, so I surmise that a "sanguine carbon" would be one made with a red-brown pigment rather than black.
Anyone know a definitive answer?
I can't find any reference to this as a separate process in either of my reference books (Farber, Crawford) or online, but I also know there were dozens of different carbon processes.
It ("sanguine") is a term applied to a reddish-brown colour, so I surmise that a "sanguine carbon" would be one made with a red-brown pigment rather than black.
Anyone know a definitive answer?