Rissy F
Member
Hi all,
This is my second time trying photogram cyanotypes using foliage and flowers. The first time I was exposing in bright sunlight. I liked the prints and got some cool midtones on some, so I wanted to play with exposing on a more overcast day so I could do longer exposures and achieve more midtones.
Yesterday I tried some test exposures and got a print with some nice midtones. It was a 30 minute exposure and the foliage I was using must have had enough transparency to get some of those midtone values, which I saw after I was done rinsing.
I dried the print on a drying rack in a cellar with very little sunlight getting in (if that matters). When I went back later to look at the dry print, all of those midtones had disappeared.
Any ideas why some of the tones seen after rinsing would disappear after drying?
I tried a second batch of prints after that test. There was less light - there was more cloud cover and it was later in the day, so no direct sun. Once I rinsed those prints, all of the blue washed off and the paper is light gray with very faint images of what I was printing. I was wondering if there just wasn't enough UV to properly expose the paper, or if I rinsed too vigorously, or both. Those prints also faded more after drying. When I was printing that second batch, they looked exposed (visible emulsion was darker greenish-blue, underneath the foliage was still yellow.
Is there a possibility that something is preventing the blue from adhering to the paper?
Or I'm wondering if I either needed a MUCH longer exposure, or if cyanotype just doesn't respond to super long exposures (over 45 minutes)?
Images below of the disappearing midtones.
Here are some other facts about my process:
- Coating my own paper with original cyanotype formula from Photographers Formulary
- I have had the (unmixed) chemicals for 1 year stored in their original dark plastic bottles
- I'm using the same paper as I did the first time I did cyanotypes (last year)
- Using tap water from the hose, but I also did this last year. I do not know the pH of my water.
Thank you for any advice!
-Rissy
This is my second time trying photogram cyanotypes using foliage and flowers. The first time I was exposing in bright sunlight. I liked the prints and got some cool midtones on some, so I wanted to play with exposing on a more overcast day so I could do longer exposures and achieve more midtones.
Yesterday I tried some test exposures and got a print with some nice midtones. It was a 30 minute exposure and the foliage I was using must have had enough transparency to get some of those midtone values, which I saw after I was done rinsing.
I dried the print on a drying rack in a cellar with very little sunlight getting in (if that matters). When I went back later to look at the dry print, all of those midtones had disappeared.
Any ideas why some of the tones seen after rinsing would disappear after drying?
I tried a second batch of prints after that test. There was less light - there was more cloud cover and it was later in the day, so no direct sun. Once I rinsed those prints, all of the blue washed off and the paper is light gray with very faint images of what I was printing. I was wondering if there just wasn't enough UV to properly expose the paper, or if I rinsed too vigorously, or both. Those prints also faded more after drying. When I was printing that second batch, they looked exposed (visible emulsion was darker greenish-blue, underneath the foliage was still yellow.
Is there a possibility that something is preventing the blue from adhering to the paper?
Or I'm wondering if I either needed a MUCH longer exposure, or if cyanotype just doesn't respond to super long exposures (over 45 minutes)?
Images below of the disappearing midtones.
Here are some other facts about my process:
- Coating my own paper with original cyanotype formula from Photographers Formulary
- I have had the (unmixed) chemicals for 1 year stored in their original dark plastic bottles
- I'm using the same paper as I did the first time I did cyanotypes (last year)
- Using tap water from the hose, but I also did this last year. I do not know the pH of my water.
Thank you for any advice!
-Rissy
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