My original concept was to stick the patches on with diluted wood glue, and it works great, but computer labels are easier to apply and probably a bit better. Just cut them so the length makes two complete wraps, with square ends, not tapered as with normal patching. Let any excess hang off the bottom, and trim it after the label glue has time to tighten up well, which will take at least 24 hours in a warm place. Then apply the lubrication, which soaks into the paper. No lubrication gets on the bullet, and the paper isn't really bonded to the bullet with enough grip to do anything except make production and handling easy.
The patches disintegrate when the bullet leaves the barrel, and have no harmful effect on accuracy during flight. But being 'glued' on, bullets can be sized if desired, and the patches stay where they belong during loading and when handling ammo. So the concept gives all the benefits of regular patching, while being very easy and quick to apply, inexpensive compared to gas checked bullets, and with far superior performance. GOP bullets give the lowest chamber pressure of any bullet I've ever shot, and I mean a LOT lower, which means extreme velocity potential, far above jacketed, with stunning accuracy, equal to the best jacketed bullets I've ever used. Nicest of all is the fact that the barrel never fouls but develops a brilliant shine the more one shoots them.
When I conceived the idea, I believed the patches would ride all the way to the target, but experience proved me wrong. Muzzle blast of even a mild load is a vengeful force compared to the strength of paper, especially after the rifling grooves weaken it.