Rolleiflexible
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You gotta take a picture of that wall though!
Here you go.
You gotta take a picture of that wall though!
About 20 years ago I shot a bunch of images in the Musée Méchanique in San Fran. I never did anything with them in all this time but I thought they might make decent cyanotypes. I don't think these are successful though so I was wrong. I think the second image says it all. El Stinko. Lol. These might work better as salt prints or Kallitypes. I believe I used Canson XL Bristol which has become my "cheap" paper.
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. I'd suggest salt prints (given their long scale) but I haven't seen the negatives.
Yep. I would also go to the opposite and wash in tap water (neutral or slight alkaline even, not enough to form iron hydroxide though) for longer period (try different lengths.) Sure it will bring the Dmax down, but do a much better job on the highlights as well. I guess it depends on what part of the print one wants to accentuate.If the negatives don't have enough contrast for cyanotypes, there's no hope at all for salt prints.
If the negatives don't have enough contrast for cyanotypes, there's no hope at all for salt prints.
Thanks Sanders. That is a lot of beautiful images which is why I wanted to see it! It is almost a work in itself. Are those mostly Kallitypes?
Curious where you got the metal chalkboard. Maybe I should upgrade.
I do something similar but on the organizing side.
My images are 10 x 12.5 inches on 11x15 inch Hahn. Pt Rag paper. I buy most of my paper as large sheets when available. HPR and many other papers are available as 22x30 inch sheets. Thus, these sheets cut down to four 11x15 inch sheets with no waste.
14X17 Vandyke Brown contact print on a3 art paper. Sun exposure, wash and toned in gold and selenium.
Home made 14 x17 camera with fuji 250mm lens, f64, xray film in pyro hd
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One of the main reasons I like alt prints is I can make larger prints. I have a small darkroom so I am pretty much limited to 8x10, but my contact printer is 14x17 and I can wash prints anywhere. It makes larger prints much easier to do. I'd bet we all share the same sentiment to some degree.
Lovely work. I see you've been watching Woody's Roundup again.![]()
Patrick, you should consider using JOBO tanks to conserve space. Since you have a 14x17 print frame, you could easily move up to 11x15 or 12x16 prints. The basic 2500/2800 JOBO tanks are 5.3" (inner diameter) across, so will accommodate paper up to 16 inches without overlapping. A basic 2551 multitank works for 8x10 prints. The 2840 gives you plenty of room for a 12x16 print. Stack a 2593 extension onto the 2840, and you have plenty of room for a 15x22 print, or even a 17x22 if you don't mind the one-inch overlap.
Yes, they are nearly all kallitypes. A few old silver gelatin prints too, but mostly kallitypes from the past several years.
Search "magnetic chalkboards" on Amazon. I got 3x4-foot boards there for under $50.
I like your idea as well. Part of creating, for me, involves marinating in past work. I shoot in fits and starts -- I need an organizing idea to get me shooting. Sometimes the idea grows from past work. Sometimes the past is a hindrance. That's the problem with organizing ideas -- they give you structure but they box you in.
I do the same thing with Revere Platinum, which also ships in 22x30 sheets with deckled edges on the 30-inch sides. For the books, I cut each down to six 10x11 sheets. For these bigger prints, I am cutting the sheets down to two 15x22-inch sheets, onr one 17x22 sheet with the rest chopped up for smaller prints.
I would like to get to the point where I print one 16x24 image on a 22x30 sheet. But I will need ginorous trays for that, and a bigger vacuum frame. Not impossible, but scaling up is not so simple. As it is, the 17x22-inch sheets are a half-inch too long for my current trays. I am reluctant to cut them down because I like the deckled edges so I manage with the paper sticking out of the tray at the end. One big help has been to dig out an old JOBO expert print drum from storage -- it's plenty big enough to process 17x22 sheets on an old Beseler roller base. I develop in a 22-inch Nikor steel canoe tray, then rinse and clear in the JOBO tank, then tone and fix in a 17x22 Cesco metal tray, then rinse in a huge tray with a siphon. The JOBO expert tank is a huge help with processing prints at these sizes.
Something a little different -- volunteered to photograph a local band on the porch of the drummer's brother...nice roses!
Platinum/palladium print from a 5x7 negative, printed last week.
Heavy metal?
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Catch them live this Saturday at the Apple Harvest Festival in Fortuna, CA!!Heavy metal?
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I am curious about the canoe tray. I've thought about getting one of those but how do you pour the chems out? Seems like it would be a mess. Wondering how you do it.
I also have a few Beseler? print drums, the biggest is for 16x20 I think. I haven't looked at them in years. The biggest drawback with those and fiber paper is the print will probably collapse in the drum. I can't say for sure because I haven't tried it of course (have you?).
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