JG Motamedi
Member
Wayne,
Before etching your plates with nasty acid, try the gelatin alone. As long as your plates are clean you shouldn't need to worry. I have never had a problem with collodion adhering to regular window-pane glass, and I know that gelatin is used as a sub, so I can't imagine that you would actually have a problem.
Gelatin should not have a color cast. Albumen adds a very slight yellow color to collodion (I don't know about its affect on gelatin, but again, I don' think you need it). Albumen used as a sub is highly diluted, generally one egg white to 500 ml of water, whipped, allowed to settle, and then filtered.
Before etching your plates with nasty acid, try the gelatin alone. As long as your plates are clean you shouldn't need to worry. I have never had a problem with collodion adhering to regular window-pane glass, and I know that gelatin is used as a sub, so I can't imagine that you would actually have a problem.
Gelatin should not have a color cast. Albumen adds a very slight yellow color to collodion (I don't know about its affect on gelatin, but again, I don' think you need it). Albumen used as a sub is highly diluted, generally one egg white to 500 ml of water, whipped, allowed to settle, and then filtered.