nmp
Member
Speaking of Stouffer, is there a similar entity in the form of a half-tone negative that one can use for something like gum.
:Niranjan
:Niranjan
Speaking of Stouffer, is there a similar entity in the form of a half-tone negative that one can use for something like gum.
:Niranjan
There are some very nice examples of Chiba/Fish glue on flickr by Charles Guerin for those who have not seen those yet
https://www.flickr.com/photos/charlesguerin/albums/72157606697095843 (towards the end).
I believe he has also shared his process instructions.
Speaking of Stouffer, is there a similar entity in the form of a half-tone negative that one can use for something like gum.
:Niranjan
the way he simply washed the prints to remove the unexposed pigment made me think of photopolymer gravure.
might he have figured out a way to use a photoinitiator with gum arabic or another polymer?
I was just thinking to use one to test various processes at the development stage.
Thanks @koraks and @PGum for the info on half tone negs. I was just thinking to use one to test various processes at the development stage. All the nuances may not be that important for that purpose. If any one of them ever got out of testing, then for real pictures those specs can be revisited. I might just look into using Photoshop to "simulate" a half-tone negative and see if that suffices for testing.
:Niranjan.
If you find a work around I would be interested to know.
the printer’s own half-toning algorithm.
Niranjan,
Attempting to half-tone directly in the image via photoshop will lead to artifacts, as it will compete with the printer’s own half-toning algorithm. You would need dedicated software to take control of the printer, even then there are limitations as koraks points out. If you find a work around I would be interested to know.
I noticed that Accurip has an 8 day (credit card-free) free trial.
About all I can say, is that they all ended up looking halftone too
Intriguing to me what is he doing (or not doing) that is different from prior efforts by Sandy King and others that did not give good (at least good enough to wean away from dichromate) prints from the ferric carbon process.
Well, I'm not entirely sure, because the one thing I'd imagine he should have had a problem with is the lack of an anaerobic surface. This is the issue that I ran into when I tested ferric carbon; the print just won't transfer to the final support if you do it the classic way. Sandy has had good luck exposing the tissue through a transparent support. While Saidane does use a transparent carrier for the tissue, he seems to expose from the top in the regular way - although the video is kind of sketchy on this crucial point.
The one that does stand out in his workflow, in any case, is his use of laserprinter transparencies for negatives. This means he's essentially using a frequency modulated halftone screen, and not a true continuous tone negative. This greatly simplifies the process as highlight retention isn't an issue anymore. As long as you can image discrete dots with good fidelity, all is good. The one caveat here is that Saidane uses black light tubes. If that's true (again, the video isn't specific - perhaps he's using LED strips but calls them 'tubes', which is already a different story), then the diffuse nature of the light would prevent a halftone process from working, and it would sort of revert back to a con-tone process due to diffusion.
So in short it's all rather inconclusive, but very, very interesting for sure - I mean, there's no arguing with the end result which at least in the video looks promising, even though crucial aspects such as rendering of fine detail and tonal smoothness cannot be judged very well.
If he was exposing from the side of the support, there wouldn't be a need for transfer, right?
I thought Calvin Grier also uses halftone negative. Is he also not reducing the burden on the process that way?
When you try to do it yourself, there might be some show-stopper that might not be obvious from the videos.
I think I'll stick with traditional gum... I love the smell of Gum Arabic too much!
I hear you on the challenges of brushing a colloid emulsion. I tried it on several occasions with gum, and frankly didn't get all that far with it. I did it just enough to determine it takes lots of practice and that special kind of feeling to get the consistency/viscosity of the emulsion juuuust right. Calvin describes this in some detail in his gum printing manual, and it boils down to that he doesn't use any kind of very fancy/expensive brushing. It's basically all technique. He applies with one brush, and then evens out with another one. One of the (few) benefits of carbon is that it doesn't take this kind of special motor skill.
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