bendytwin
Member
Dear friends and colleagues,
Briefly, before I describe the research in the title of this post: I want to express my eternal thanks to so many here who, without being otherwise aware of it, I owe a debt of gratitude for your having contributed to 15+ years of posts (first from APUG / Photo.net and now here) that made my academic work possible. I've lost count of how many times I came looking for an odd answer and found it. I'm currently teaching 16mm analog film production at UMass Amherst, having brought it back to life after many years on hiatus. Before that, I spent a decade doing my PhD on the chemical, mechanical, and optical aspects of photographic and cinematographic technology, focusing on two movements (International Pictorialism and French New Wave cinema) as case studies. Many of you are my heroes without knowing it (RIP Ron Mowrey) -- thank you all for blessing members such as myself who come here to the well of photographic knowledge to draw metaphorical water.
So to share some excitement: together with a colleague in Chemistry, I'm doing interdisciplinary research on coffee and phenol-based photographic developers. This year we received a $10,000 seed grant from UMass Amherst's School of Earth and Sustainability (which funded our purchase of a couple cases of 16mm Tri-X for our students) in order to process student film in Caffenol made from leftover dining hall coffee and grounds and in parallel do HPLC on it to assess caffeic acid content, which is ostensibly one of the primary active ingredients when used as a developer. In connection with this effort, we're working with the National Science Foundation's Innovation Corps to talk with everyone from darkroom managers to end-users to suppliers like Photographer's Formulary about interest in eco-friendly, coffee-based developer.
As we start to make a list of contacts, please reply or message me, as we'd love to be in correspondence with anyone interested here, including:
1) end-users interested in sustainable film development, and
2) chemists and others with experience with regard to the chemistry of photography
Since I am but a humble practitioner, that second category will be a big help to my colleague in Chemistry -- I know Caffenol works, but I wouldn't be able to write out a photographic oxidation-reduction reaction without pulling out Mees!
I'm of course a member of the various FB developing groups and am in the middle of writing the founders of Caffenol.org about this effort. Just got off the phone with Dr. Scott Williams from RIT who to my knowledge did some of the first publicly-available university work on coffee development in 1995. Very excited to be pushing forward with this project!
David Bendiksen
www.davidbendiksen.com
Visiting Filmmaker, Film Studies Program
University of Massachusetts Amherst
Briefly, before I describe the research in the title of this post: I want to express my eternal thanks to so many here who, without being otherwise aware of it, I owe a debt of gratitude for your having contributed to 15+ years of posts (first from APUG / Photo.net and now here) that made my academic work possible. I've lost count of how many times I came looking for an odd answer and found it. I'm currently teaching 16mm analog film production at UMass Amherst, having brought it back to life after many years on hiatus. Before that, I spent a decade doing my PhD on the chemical, mechanical, and optical aspects of photographic and cinematographic technology, focusing on two movements (International Pictorialism and French New Wave cinema) as case studies. Many of you are my heroes without knowing it (RIP Ron Mowrey) -- thank you all for blessing members such as myself who come here to the well of photographic knowledge to draw metaphorical water.
So to share some excitement: together with a colleague in Chemistry, I'm doing interdisciplinary research on coffee and phenol-based photographic developers. This year we received a $10,000 seed grant from UMass Amherst's School of Earth and Sustainability (which funded our purchase of a couple cases of 16mm Tri-X for our students) in order to process student film in Caffenol made from leftover dining hall coffee and grounds and in parallel do HPLC on it to assess caffeic acid content, which is ostensibly one of the primary active ingredients when used as a developer. In connection with this effort, we're working with the National Science Foundation's Innovation Corps to talk with everyone from darkroom managers to end-users to suppliers like Photographer's Formulary about interest in eco-friendly, coffee-based developer.
As we start to make a list of contacts, please reply or message me, as we'd love to be in correspondence with anyone interested here, including:
1) end-users interested in sustainable film development, and
2) chemists and others with experience with regard to the chemistry of photography
Since I am but a humble practitioner, that second category will be a big help to my colleague in Chemistry -- I know Caffenol works, but I wouldn't be able to write out a photographic oxidation-reduction reaction without pulling out Mees!
I'm of course a member of the various FB developing groups and am in the middle of writing the founders of Caffenol.org about this effort. Just got off the phone with Dr. Scott Williams from RIT who to my knowledge did some of the first publicly-available university work on coffee development in 1995. Very excited to be pushing forward with this project!
David Bendiksen
portfolio — David Bendiksen
University of Massachusetts Amherst