Hi All:
Peter Balazsy here again.
Http://www.pbpix.com
http://en.allexperts.com/e/f/fu/fuji_transfer.htm
I thought I'd try to pass along some more interesting helpful hints about making creative/artistic
Fuji transfers.
I have usually recommended using Arches-88 as a receptor paper because it does give you good repeatable results.. (albeit on the yellow side it seems)
Today I did a
dry transfer onto RIVES "Heavyweight" watercolor & printmaking paper.
Dead Link Removed
The transferred image was a bit pale and thin or washed out.... but I contribute that (lack of density) mostly to the fact that I was copying from a color ink-jet print instead of copying from a good, rich-colored, regular silver halide color photo.
Anyway my point here today is that I decided to experiment with water-color painting
over the transferred image (much as I used to be able to do with Polaroid transfers) using just some simple 99 cent kid's watercolors and it seemed to work well.
In my experiments with watercolors in the past ( using Arches88) I couldn't use watercolors because just the clear water itself seemed to effect or dilute the transfer and even if it didn't effect the transfer colors the watercolors would swell-up the paper. Because the paper is acting like a sponge and does not allow one to brush on in any reasonable way.
However, using the Rieves "Heavyweight" paper today, it took the watercolors quite well.
I was afraid the water might
dilute the FUJI dyes ...but that didn't seem to be the case.
I didn't want to "paint"
over the image so much as I just wanted to sort-of
tint the image using very thin watery "translucent-like" colors.
My goal was to allow much of the definition of the photo to still appear through the watercolors and NOT to have the opaqueness of the watercolor paint obliterate most or any serious amount of the detail beneath it.