Donald Qualls
Subscriber
I'm not a snob -- if use of a regular screen makes the result a Dufay instead of an Autochrome, it's still (assuming it works) a means of making color images on film after only B&W film is available (a situation I now believe will occur within my lifetime, if not within the next decade). I might point out, however, that it should be possible to simulate a random-dot stochastic screen with a printed output. There may be some advantage to a random pattern, in that it will avoid moire and similar artifacts when regular patterns are photographed with a system that uses a regular screen (why do directors still allow striped suits on television?).
Speed loss may be slightly mitigated by the fact that the black matrix needn't cover as much (if any) of the film area as it did with original Autochromes (the example posted must be one of the later varieties; earlier ones were about 30% black, from images I've seen). If one can tailor the dye droplet size (as in fact some enhanced resolution printers do), it might be possible to arrange for 100% coverage of the working surface without requiring any black ink/dye at all.
I think Ole meant to use the emulsion lifted from the film as a permanent coating on the glass -- essentially a means to use modern high speed pan emulsions to recreate Dufay or autochrome with the filter layer under the sensitive layer. Water would be a bad way to approach this, as it tends to dissove out the sensitizing and panchromatizing dyes (film that's been damp before exposure will show dark and light areas where the dyes have dissolved away and redeposited, changing the film speed locally). From the description, I won't want takamine anywhere near me; I'd rather grind pyro by hand in a closed room.
Speed loss may be slightly mitigated by the fact that the black matrix needn't cover as much (if any) of the film area as it did with original Autochromes (the example posted must be one of the later varieties; earlier ones were about 30% black, from images I've seen). If one can tailor the dye droplet size (as in fact some enhanced resolution printers do), it might be possible to arrange for 100% coverage of the working surface without requiring any black ink/dye at all.
I think Ole meant to use the emulsion lifted from the film as a permanent coating on the glass -- essentially a means to use modern high speed pan emulsions to recreate Dufay or autochrome with the filter layer under the sensitive layer. Water would be a bad way to approach this, as it tends to dissove out the sensitizing and panchromatizing dyes (film that's been damp before exposure will show dark and light areas where the dyes have dissolved away and redeposited, changing the film speed locally). From the description, I won't want takamine anywhere near me; I'd rather grind pyro by hand in a closed room.