I believe David Spencer does it as well, as least this is what I was told about his prints when I went to look at them. How do you do this oil prints? The ones I saw from Spencer were beautiful!gandolfi said:my girlfriend and I just started trying the oilprint process...
for some reason it seems that my twin brother might be the only on in the world that does this now...
that can't be true..
anyone in here?
mind you: I am talking about the original oilprinting - not the bromoil which everybody seems to be doing...
gandolfi said:my girlfriend and I just started trying the oilprint process...
for some reason it seems that my twin brother might be the only on in the world that does this now...
that can't be true..
anyone in here?
mind you: I am talking about the original oilprinting - not the bromoil which everybody seems to be doing...
garryl said:Are you talking about Rawling's oils??
Peter Rockstroh said:Where does the name oil print come from ? It seems you are sensitizing gelatin (plus something else) with potassium chromate and making the U.V. exposed areas (through the negative) insoluble in water, while washing the unexposed parts out. I assume you do a color separation and apply 4 coats ?
I´ve worked with silk-screen emulsions (PVA based) which work in a similar manner. Did I understand you correctly ?
garryl said:Bromoil evolved from the oil-printing process developed by G.E.H. Rawlings in 1904, which is a pigment-based process using paper with a dichromated gelatin matrix requiring a negative the same size as the desired print size. In 1907, responding to the problems of using contact-sized negatives, E.J. Wall wrote a brief article suggesting the use of a bromide enlargement as the basis for the oil print.
gandolfi said:my girlfriend and I just started trying the oilprint process...
for some reason it seems that my twin brother might be the only on in the world that does this now...
that can't be true..
anyone in here?
mind you: I am talking about the original oilprinting - not the bromoil which everybody seems to be doing...
Fulvio said:Hi Emil, nice to see you on APUG
I wrote you a couple of months ago, but you didn't answer...
if you're interested I can send you some recipe and instructions I have in my books (rawlins oil print and many other processes) - write me an email and I will send some scan
I'm experimenting with cyanotypes right now; I want to try one process at the time. But I will soon start printing in rawlins oil too. As for the "oleoprint" process there's this specific guide on Alt.Photo.com http://www.alternativephotography.com/process_oilprint.html
but you should already know that
Fulvio
Whiteymorange said:The Unblinking Eye site has a lot about pigment printing as well as Bromoil. I was looking for a workshop in the northeast US for these techniques earlier this year - no luck.
David Lewis gave one last week at Photographers' Formulary out in Montana but my budget suffered a nervous breakdown as soon as I mentioned going.
Next year...maybe?
I'm interested in using the original print as a master for transfer printing as well. I've even got a press! I just can't seem to make the process work without the experience of going through it with someone who actually knows what he/she is doing.
look like it - interesting, as he mails me with news, from time to time..argus said:
gandolfi said:Whitymorange
thanks for that link - interesting, and it seems that we are not the only ones doing this..
beautiful images too..
thanks again..
(I'm sure, if you came to Denmark, my brother would be glad to give you tutoring in this technique..)
gandolfi said:hi fulvio
yes - I know, as it is my twin brother that made that....
I was just wondering whether others do it these days..
seems not.
aah well - then we can be the only ones in the world, and that is fun too....;-)
gandolfi said:FULVIO
eric Kellerman is coming here on monday and stays for some days...
where are you?
hi fulvio
yes - I know, as it is my twin brother that made that....
I was just wondering whether others do it these days..
seems not.
aah well - then we can be the only ones in the world, and that is fun too....;-)
We are not ALONE!
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