are paper negatives calotypes, talbotypes or salt prints ... because talbot used a paper negative?
John has already posted about retina prints in this thread hasn't he?
If the paper negative is a silver gelatin paper, and the print from the paper negative is on silver gelatin paper, why not call it a silver gelatin print. Why call it anything else?
We don't say, for example, carbon [transfer] print from a digital inter-negative. Isn't the point what the end result is, not what the intermediate steps are.
Here is what you said in response to another post:
"and yeah i know what you mean about as soon as it hits a scanner it is something different ... i tend to say it is a photograph/sKKan OF a retina print but i guess its kind of obvious the sKKanned version isn't the original ... i can't call them retinal scans, i'm not an MD."
Actually, you tend to say they are retina prints. You don't call them scanned and hand colored and/or photoshopped retinas. And it is only obvious it is not an original retina to someone steeped in the history of photography. Are you being transparent or opaque? And for what reason.
Understood. The question to ask is what is the motivation for calling a print by a special name. Is it to be technically accurate? Is it to impress the viewer? Something else?
For example, perhaps John can chime in on why he calls what he does here "retina prints".
if you read the post in the blog you linked to it specifically said i scanned and inverted the image
and added colors to the negative. where is it that i am being opaque?
Why name them at all? It's the path to the dark side.
I don't understand your need to give them a special name.
And your claim that they are not digital after you have scanned them, inverted (and sometimes "tinted") them in Photoshop, and printed them out on an inkjet printer is curious to say the least.
i have never stated that they aren't a product of long exposure and capturing the image with a scanner.
i have never stated that the images weren't inverted in PS, or tinted in PS ( or by hand with watercolors and then scanned )
i have never once printed them with an ink jet printer.
John has already posted about retina prints in this thread hasn't he?
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links. To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here. |
PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY: ![]() |