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Find: New articles Process step-by-step Working practicesWill Dunniway: A Man with a MissionLate, but not too late in life, Will Dunniway pursues his passion for the wet plate collodion process.
For as long as he can remember, Will, 61, has been enthralled with 19th century tintype (also known as wet-plate collodion), a type of early photography he'd seen in Civil War books as a child. When, in 1988, he ran across renowned contemporary tintype photographers John Coffer and Claude Levet at a Civil War reenactment, he felt he'd "found the keys to the kingdom... "My mother used to get me history and Civil War books so I could look at the photography" says Will, a lifelong history buff who was born and raised in Colton, in Southern California, but spent 30 years as a graphic artist in the Santa Cruz Mountains. He retired in 2003 and moved to Corona, where he lives with his wife, Frances. "I'd always wanted to do it myself, but I didn't know how. When I found someone doing it, it was love at first sight." Will worked as an apprentice under John Coffer (who is so besotted with 19th century life that he lives in a cabin with no electricity or running water in upstate Dundee, NY), and soon became an expert himself.
Will practiced by making and selling tintypes and ambrotypes (same as a tintype, just on glass) of re-enactors at historical events from reenactments of the 1850 Gold Rush to the Battle of Gettysburg. Will continues to work these events, like "a living historical demonstration," charging around $50 for a 5-by-7 tintype. Will now also does landscapes in wet plate collodion glass negatives and teaches the process throughout the Western America. What is 'Wet Plate Collodion?'Will uses only original equipment, choosing from one of his seven original wet-plate cameras and an array of 22 original lenses. These lenses are all handmade with hand-ground glass, giving the wet images a very different look than you would see with modern optics. These old optics tend to have what is called a "sweet spot" in the center of the image as these images radiate outward, the sharpness falls off. The result is delightfully ethereal, almost dreamlike in appearance.
Time-consuming, costly and tricky (Will's tools include heavy wooden and brass hardware 19th century wet plate cameras with large brass lenses), the process requires its practitioners to make exposures on glass or blackened-iron tin plates, each one at a time while the plate is still wet. The collodion solution (nitro cellulose in ether with the addition of alcohols) is 'salted' days before with iodides and bromides to prepare it for the silver nitrate solution that makes the collodion wet film on the plates sensitive to light. Prior to a one day shoot, it typically takes another day just to prepare the chemicals and gather the gear. Not a casual affair. Once exposed, the image is developed using iron sulfate and acidic acid mixed with water, rinsed and fixed in potassium cyanide. The resulting images look eerily like they came straight out of the Victorian age, complete with pathos and intensity.
For Will Dunniway, collodion photography represents the perfect combination of history and art; the perfect interplay between the past, present and future; between old glass, wood, chemicals and the weather; between luck and sweat. "It's what makes me who I am," says Will. "When I found collodion photography, I knew I had found what I wanted to do with the rest of my life".
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