Nodda Duma
Member
Emulsion making and plate coating can be unforgiving!
I wanted to share an example of what you end up with if you don't ensure the emulsion sticks to the plate. It happens fairly often when you start to coat plates, less often when you get the technique down. Get lazy, and BOOM! (as my daughter would say) you have floating emulsion..
This is my long-term stored emulsion by the way... I mixed this just over a year ago and coated a large batch of plates when the emulsion was ~8 months old. This plate then sat unused for about 4 months.
Just to be clear, the age didn't have anything to do with the emulsion lifting: All the other plates have turned out just fine. I must have been lazy cleaning the glass for this particular plate.
Oh and that's me waving at the camera on the right for about 30 seconds of the 1.5 minute exposure.
Feel free to add the results of your own screw-ups ... if you dare!
Cheers!
Jason
I wanted to share an example of what you end up with if you don't ensure the emulsion sticks to the plate. It happens fairly often when you start to coat plates, less often when you get the technique down. Get lazy, and BOOM! (as my daughter would say) you have floating emulsion..
This is my long-term stored emulsion by the way... I mixed this just over a year ago and coated a large batch of plates when the emulsion was ~8 months old. This plate then sat unused for about 4 months.
Just to be clear, the age didn't have anything to do with the emulsion lifting: All the other plates have turned out just fine. I must have been lazy cleaning the glass for this particular plate.
Oh and that's me waving at the camera on the right for about 30 seconds of the 1.5 minute exposure.
Feel free to add the results of your own screw-ups ... if you dare!
Cheers!
Jason