I didn't look it up. Sorry, but I thought it involved asphalt or tar with solvents. In any event, Christopher wrote the Photo Techniques article referred to above. I'll have to dig it up. So many things to do and so little time. Chris, if I can find more info in some of my very old texts, I'll e-mail you. PE
Hi PE,
Yes, of course I do know
how a physautotype is made (for anyone interested, go to the niepce.com website .. well worth snooping around in, if alt processes and photographic history are of interest to you...
THERE IS EVEN A 24 HOUR WEBCAM POINTED OUT THE VERY SAME WINDOW THROUGH WHICH THE FIRST KNOWN PHOTOGRAPH WAS TAKEN!
Dead Link Removed
A tiny bit about the physautotype (fizz-auto-type): it's generally easy*. First, you reduce some essential lavender oil to a residue*, then crush the residue and mix it with alcohol. After that, you coat the mixture onto a highly polished silver-plate sheet of metal and it evaporates to leave a coating of a kind of super-fine powder. It's ready for exposure. Exposure (in-camera exposure times are extremely long, ie: open the lens and go on vacation ... Jean-Louis "cheats" by exposing plates from a slide in a slide projector). "Development" is done by exposing the plate to the fumes of white petroleum. *The "hardest" part seems to be heating the lavender oil correctly to get the right quality of resin. Apparently it takes a little practice. Marignier says he might come out with a little kit, to save time and guarantee results. Again, take a look at the above link.. there are even step-by-step photos.
Essentially, I am just interested in finding someone (besides Jean-Louis Marignier himself) who is
already playing with this process, as I intend to start dappling with it in the coming year. The images I've seen are
gorgeous, delicate and
super detailed, so I figure it would be a mistake
not to at least try the process. Any other crazy fools interested in this, besides me? (and Niepce!)
.