DPVisions
Subscriber
Finally have had success on printing a cyanotype image onto glass. I have been working on this over that past year in trying to create a suitable subbing for glass and plexiglass that did not utilize gelatin and require hardening. With some valuable help from Bill and his PVA recipie I was able to finally get an image onto glass.
Process is relatively simple and once the image is on and the PVA cured by baking in the oven at 250 degrees it is not easily coming off.
I mixed up a solution of Kuraray R-1110, a silated 100% hydrolized PVA, and coated a sheet of glass. Let the coated glass dry overnight and then baked in the over for 30 minutes, once the glass cooled I coated 12" square with 4ml of cyanotype emulsion that had 3 drops of tween 20 added. Once that dried I exposed for my normal cyanotype exposure, washed and baked again for 10 minutes.
Really bad scan of the image, too big to fit on scanner bed. Image is of a IFS fractal
Cheers,
David
Process is relatively simple and once the image is on and the PVA cured by baking in the oven at 250 degrees it is not easily coming off.
I mixed up a solution of Kuraray R-1110, a silated 100% hydrolized PVA, and coated a sheet of glass. Let the coated glass dry overnight and then baked in the over for 30 minutes, once the glass cooled I coated 12" square with 4ml of cyanotype emulsion that had 3 drops of tween 20 added. Once that dried I exposed for my normal cyanotype exposure, washed and baked again for 10 minutes.
Really bad scan of the image, too big to fit on scanner bed. Image is of a IFS fractal


Cheers,
David