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I was up really late last night and a few different darkroom ideas running through my head, which eventually merged in to one. I hope to try it out soon if the general concensus is that there was nothing other than tobacco in my pipe.
I was thinking about 3 colour carbon, using in-camera separations on B&W film. I was also thinking about emulsions lifting off paper in hot water, and how the emulsion can be stained or dyed a colour rather than a chemical toner for the metal.
My idea was this: Using the RGB in-camera separation negatives to produce 3 prints. Each of these prints would be dyed using food colouring for testing, perhaps more permanent dyes if the idea proved workable. Cyan for the red neg, magenta for the green, and yellow for the blue. Then the emulsions would be floated off in hot water and reassembled on to a plain white sheet of paper hopefully revealing a full-colour print. If the emulsion is unmanageable after removal from the original paper then perhaps removing them one at a time, in contact with another sheet of paper, and then again on to the final base to correct the lateral reversal. An undyed emulsion could even be used as a K layer.
I don't have much money for photo stuff right now, but I think some food colouring and a package of 5x7 RC paper is doable provided I'm not COMPLETELY insane!
I was thinking about 3 colour carbon, using in-camera separations on B&W film. I was also thinking about emulsions lifting off paper in hot water, and how the emulsion can be stained or dyed a colour rather than a chemical toner for the metal.
My idea was this: Using the RGB in-camera separation negatives to produce 3 prints. Each of these prints would be dyed using food colouring for testing, perhaps more permanent dyes if the idea proved workable. Cyan for the red neg, magenta for the green, and yellow for the blue. Then the emulsions would be floated off in hot water and reassembled on to a plain white sheet of paper hopefully revealing a full-colour print. If the emulsion is unmanageable after removal from the original paper then perhaps removing them one at a time, in contact with another sheet of paper, and then again on to the final base to correct the lateral reversal. An undyed emulsion could even be used as a K layer.
I don't have much money for photo stuff right now, but I think some food colouring and a package of 5x7 RC paper is doable provided I'm not COMPLETELY insane!