Sorry, but I have to ask. What are we looking at here. One piece of paper and three negatives? That can't be since you have 2 different exposure times. Did you expose 2 long one together and then the other and then develop all together? Or did you develop in between?
:Niranjan.
I did expose both the top ones before the first development, but my contact printer is only 11x14, so I had to block off half the page, then switch. The third was done after developing the first 2. I have 2 more negatives to add.
Ah, now I get it....you are trying to make a collage of sorts with many different images on the same paper. Do you see any change in how the paper takes the sensitizer as you do more and more wet processing. Is this classic or the new cyano. More details please...
:Niranjan.
I like the one on the top left. The digital neg is very contrasty, maybe too dark? Might just be that process. W/ only a 15 minute exposure time, you could fine tune it w/ 4 different exposures in just an hr.
Yep. That’s the idea. These are pictures I took while my wife was undergoing IVF and the resulting pregnancy. Our daughter just turned 3 and I still haven’t finished. From what I can tell this is the classic formula. Ferric ammonium citrate and potassium ferrocyanide, diluted with water in a saturated solution, mixed 1:1. I’ve been really impressed with this watercolor paper. It’s now been through 3 cycles, no shrinking, no warping, no noticeable deterioration, and it’s still taking the sensitizer beautifully. There is a slight yellowing, but it’s barely noticeable.
View attachment 328719
I need to do a little spot toning, but overall, I’m really pleased with how this turned out.
You do get a real dark (Dmax-wise) cyanotype while keeping highlights clean - what's the secret?
:Niranjan.
Start with high contrast negatives.
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