This popped up in my YouTube stream just before New Year's:
It's Calvin Grier from the Wet Print teasing us with a non-toxic alternative to gum printing. Unlike e.g. casein and carbon, gum printing is apparently difficult or impossible to do well without dichromate. Apparently Grier has been cracking some nuts last year and has developed a combination of a colloid and a sensitizer (he calls it "Printmaker's Friend") that can substitute for gum arabic and dichromate. It's supposed to be a rather flexible and non-toxic way of making pigment prints, and it's apparently more light-sensitive than dichromate as well.
There's a longer (nearly 2 hours) video on it here as well:
This is far less organized and apparently a mashup of a Zoom conference and some additional footage giving some background info. I've only watched about half of it and that part mostly covers material from his Calibration e-book series, and his discussion of tonal separations from a single negative seems to not be necessarily specific to this new printmaking material - indeed, I had been doing something quite similar with regular carbon (and with moderate success) for a bit before hearing about this.
Anyway, it's fascinating stuff and makes me wonder what this material (or rather, combination of materials) is, exactly. Grier is probably going to keep his lips sealed about it since he's in the process of a patent application. Probably due to this it should hit the market only in 2024 with some workshops being given by him later this year.
It's Calvin Grier from the Wet Print teasing us with a non-toxic alternative to gum printing. Unlike e.g. casein and carbon, gum printing is apparently difficult or impossible to do well without dichromate. Apparently Grier has been cracking some nuts last year and has developed a combination of a colloid and a sensitizer (he calls it "Printmaker's Friend") that can substitute for gum arabic and dichromate. It's supposed to be a rather flexible and non-toxic way of making pigment prints, and it's apparently more light-sensitive than dichromate as well.
There's a longer (nearly 2 hours) video on it here as well:
This is far less organized and apparently a mashup of a Zoom conference and some additional footage giving some background info. I've only watched about half of it and that part mostly covers material from his Calibration e-book series, and his discussion of tonal separations from a single negative seems to not be necessarily specific to this new printmaking material - indeed, I had been doing something quite similar with regular carbon (and with moderate success) for a bit before hearing about this.
Anyway, it's fascinating stuff and makes me wonder what this material (or rather, combination of materials) is, exactly. Grier is probably going to keep his lips sealed about it since he's in the process of a patent application. Probably due to this it should hit the market only in 2024 with some workshops being given by him later this year.