|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
Find: New articles Process step-by-step Working practicesPyro, Digital Negatives and Alternative ProcessesAlex outlines a method of combining pyro, digital negs and alt. proc.This project began with my wanting to make a piece of work with some Comedia dell’arte masks I have, photographing them as still life and in performance. They are both beautiful objects and playful, but like most masks they also have a I began in the traditional way. Using a large format camera, in this case 5x4, I placed two of the masks on my windowsill and photographed them using available light. I followed the usual procedure for making the negatives: Ilford FP4 plus film, overexpose by one stop then overdevelop in Ilford ID11 by 80%. This gives a negative which will print well using many alt processes but is too dense for silver printing. fig 1. The disadvantage of working this way is that I was limited to a single size of print.
Developing large format film in PMK pyroAnother approach I had read about for making alternative photographic prints involved developing large format film in PMK pyro, without increasing exposure or processing time. Pyro produces a yellow stain in proportion to the developed silver and the filtration effect of this coloured stain equates to extra density when exposing by the ultraviolet light used for making alt prints. So, PMK Pyro developed negs could be printed both on silver gelatine paper and when using alternative processes. I exposed a sheet FP4 Plus at 125 ISO and developed it in PMK Pyro, then contact printed it using the new cyanotype process. The negative printed really well and very fast, but again, print size was restricted by the size of the camera negative. Dan Burkholder, in his book Making Digital Negatives, outlines a method of producing enlarged negatives on an inkjet printer using acetate. Instead of printing onto the acetate using black ink he uses an orange colour, which absorbs the UV light and therefore equates to density. Burkholder gives some suggestions on increasing the contrast by using the Curves function in Photoshop and offers different Curve profiles for different processes. The advantages are clear: any format negative original can make any size print. The only limitations are the size of the digitised file and the maximum format of the printer making the acetate negatives. My Fox Talbot Moment...
Registered the two images on top of one another (to increase the density) and made a new cyanotype print. It worked! My Fox Talbot Moment... I don’t know of anyone else using this technique. To make the body of work with the Comedia dell’arte masks shown here, I used 35mm Delta 3200 film processed in PMK Pyro. The prints were made using new cyanotype and argyrotype processes. The procedure I used is as follows:
I found using the combination of the high speed of 35mm Delta 3200 with the colour staining benefits of PMK Pyro development have given me an enormous amount of freedom. I didn’t need a studio - all the pictures were taken in my study at home. I used available light, or a combination of hand flash and available light. This project was successful on two counts. I produced a piece of work with which I’m very pleased; and I also made a technical discovery which I can now share with others. The whole series can be seen in my gallery on this site. I have had favourable reactions to the pictures, although some people have found plates 5, 6 and 7 disturbing - a middle aged man photographing himself in that manner and by so doing, taking alternative photographic processes beyond the pictorial. Email this article to a friend
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
about us ~ advertise ~ contribute articles/info ~ copyright ~ email ~ newsletter ~ get your gallery here ~ links |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||