hi, its me, the OP of this old thread ..
the idea behind me starting this thread had to do with me digging through 35+ year old boxes of
high school and college prints. i never threw anything out, ever. i found poorly made prints, in both fiber and rc,
test strips and final prints. the test strips and bad test prints were all processed archivally like the final prints, i figured
there really is no point in not processing anything archivally, i thought they were interesting enough to save at the time, and at one point
a college roomate laughed because i took that puddy stuff and covered a wall or 2 with all this stuff where i was living. it was kind of fun but
at the same time i still can't figure out why i saved or bothered to save it all. and i haven't looked in the boxes again so i don't remember if
i put them in the trash or decided they were important enough that they be saved.
the idea that someone ( me ) would save scraps of paper that mean nothing i thought was kind of absurd. then, here on photrio ( then apug )
people are making every single thing they make archival. it got me wondering whose archive are we all making these images for ?
i know if i am lucky 1% of what i have made will have any sort of artistic, cultural or archival importance. was i just vain for just saving it all ?
i still archivally wash everything, i still perma wash everything i still take care and do things right ... probably out of habit not vanity ...and when i
make retina prints and sun prints if i open the dark drawer 1 month or 1 year or 1 day later and the images are still there on the paper i am secretly happy they didn't vanish
ned and mike
i wondered the same thing about calotype vs salt prints ... and i contacted a photo historian at a museum years ago
and what i was told was a little bit of what you both said. the process to make the NEGATIVE is a calotype a print made on salted paper is a salt print
AND ... if a calotype negative is printed on a salted paper print it might be called a calotype print or a salt print and a talbotype...
its too bad lord whft isn't here to actually correct us cause it is kind of confusing !