William quaintance
Member
Porphyry is stone
Three separate plates are coated with different dyed emulsions.
The plates are developed under three different color safe lights.
OK, are these plates also coated with a silver halide collodion emulsion?
Why?
I have a feeling there's a massive misunderstanding or fundamental difference in how we interpret some crucial terms like 'wet plate' and 'collodion' at the basis of this thread.
Is this slow process? Since July and still no print to show?
I think people want to see some photo of anything: the results, the paintings, anything other than just words.
The Dyed collodion plate is of course bathed in silver nitrate.
Not really; if it's a safelight, it wouldn't play a role in development or exposure, and its color wouldn't matter as long as the plate/print/etc isn't sensitive to it. So the first logical question would be if your process also work if the plates are developed in absolute darkness. If not, we're not talking about a safelight, but a light that functions perhaps to give a fogging exposure or something like that. It's essential details like these that remain unclear despite repeated attempts to clarify.It see seems only logical three different safeloghtd are necessary.
I suggest searching the national gallery site wet plate collodion color photography archive.
It would be nice if to gift the lab away to a good home.
I suggest searching the national gallery site wet plate collodion color photography archive.
I suggest you provide a link to such examples.
OK, so you have a 'dyed collodion plate'. Does that mean a glass plate with a collodion layer adhered to it? How and at what stage is it dyed, and with which dye? Is the dye added to the collodion poured onto the plate? Which chemicals are added to the collodion, specifically which halides (bromide, chloride, iodide)? Does the dye survive subsequent development, fixing and washing, or does the dye only play a role during exposure?
Not really; if it's a safelight, it wouldn't play a role in development or exposure, and its color wouldn't matter as long as the plate/print/etc isn't sensitive to it. So the first logical question would be if your process also work if the plates are developed in absolute darkness. If not, we're not talking about a safelight, but a light that functions perhaps to give a fogging exposure or something like that. It's essential details like these that remain unclear despite repeated attempts to clarify.
Your mention of 3 safelights and hints at 3 plates suggest this is some kind of in-camera separation process, where the same scene is photographed 3 times with 3 different colors, and the colors are then somehow again assembled (in gum printing?) in a further printing process. Is this correct?
Earlier I've done what you said and searched the collection you indicated. No works that matched your description were indexed.
It should be very easy to upload a few examples of color collodion plates (or prints?) you've produced to illustrate what we're talking about. This would already clarify matters to a large extent.
I'm sure that e.g. Mark Osterman (https://www.collodion.org/) and/or the George Eastman House (https://www.eastman.org/) would b
OK, so you have a 'dyed collodion plate'. Does that mean a glass plate with a collodion layer adhered to it? How and at what stage is it dyed, and with which dye? Is the dye added to the collodion poured onto the plate? Which chemicals are added to the collodion, specifically which halides (bromide, chloride, iodide)? Does the dye survive subsequent development, fixing and washing, or does the dye only play a role during exposure?
Not really; if it's a safelight, it wouldn't play a role in development or exposure, and its color wouldn't matter as long as the plate/print/etc isn't sensitive to it. So the first logical question would be if your process also work if the plates are developed in absolute darkness. If not, we're not talking about a safelight, but a light that functions perhaps to give a fogging exposure or something like that. It's essential details like these that remain unclear despite repeated attempts to clarify.
Your mention of 3 safelights and hints at 3 plates suggest this is some kind of in-camera separation process, where the same scene is photographed 3 times with 3 different colors, and the colors are then somehow again assembled (in gum printing?) in a further printing process. Is this correct?
Earlier I've done what you said and searched the collection you indicated. No works that matched your description were indexed.
It should be very easy to upload a few examples of color collodion plates (or prints?) you've produced to illustrate what we're talking about. This would already clarify matters to a large extent.
I'm sure that e.g. Mark Osterman (https://www.collodion.org/) and/or the George Eastman House (https://www.eastman.org/) would be interested to include the process in their living collection. This would also be a good way to disseminate it to future audiences. Likewise, it would be possible to self-publish your findings online, e.g. in the form of a few YouTube videos that demonstrate the process, or maybe a self-authored book, website etc. Perhaps someone close to where you're located is willing to take the plunge and meet up with you and help you publish, find a custodian for your technology etc. I'm not in the position to do this, but if Iived close to you, I probably would have been willing to spend a few hours figuring what the heck is actually going on at your end.
e interested to include the process in their living collection. This would also be a good way to disseminate it to future audiences. Likewise, it would be possible to self-publish your findings online, e.g. in the form of a few YouTube videos that demonstrate the process, or maybe a self-authored book, website etc. Perhaps someone close to where you're located is willing to take the plunge and meet up with you and help you publish, find a custodian for your technology etc. I'm not in the position to do this, but if Iived close to you, I probably would have been willing to spend a few hours figuring what the heck is actually going on at your end.
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