This would work, giving white text which would be readable if over a dark area of the print. In the 'old' days, we used to type what we wanted on a white sheet of paper, photograph it with 8 x 10 film, then trim the resulting negative and tape it to the easel. It would be in contact with the bottom area of the print when exposed, producing a white area with black print. You could try variations of this depending on what you wanted to be the result.
Instead of fooling with 8x10 film, I used Tech Pan processed in d76 to photograph a laser printed sheet of typing paper with my desired logo and text placed in the appropriate section of the paper. I exposed 100 sheets of 8x10 Ilford MG, but didn't process them, kept them all oriented the same direction. Then I went back and re-exposed the sheets to the group shot I was using and developed normally.
Result; a group portrait with black text and logo.
Thanks. Hm, I think I could buy some lith-film. Efke makes a thin film called OP12. OH-film for inkjet has a matte surface that wouldn't look good, and on clear OH-film I must write with a marker.
clear oh film might be too thick
and you will have extra textures on the page as well.
maybe a clear sheet of mylar ( thin ) ..
i have been wrestling with the idea with text on my images
for a while .. and my handwriting is not the best ...
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