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jnanian

can't upload this here, but i am stuck between 2 worlds

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by , 02-02-2013 at 08:26 PM (1057 Views)
like these 2 old guys walking on a sand bar in the middle of the bay
where rip tide would eat them for dinner if it was high tide
as they walked to the light house in the rain and cold ...
i am sometimes stuck between the world of now and the world of yesterday.
i can't post this image here, but over on dpug instead it is made using hybrid means ...
i used a dcam to make the initial exposure and a paper negative from that and then a sun print
cyanotype left in a printing frame for 2 days in the sun after that ...
stuck between then and now here and there liking low tide a lot, but always worried about
the tide coming in ..

if you mosey over to DPUG you will see the essentials ..
thanks !
john
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Updated 02-03-2013 at 04:59 PM by jnanian

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Comments

  1. EASmithV's Avatar
    that's great. I need to do more with printing.
  2. jnanian's Avatar
    thanks ! make some prints, enjoy yourself
    i have found a new freedom making sun prints
    like with processing my film in coffee ..
    i can leave the print in the sun and do something else
    - john
  3. ntenny's Avatar
    So the cyanotype is from the paper negative, is that right? Or is there an intermediate sunprint stage? I'll take a look over at DPUG, but it sounds like there are major parts of this process that are on-topic here...

    -NT
  4. jnanian's Avatar
    Quote Originally Posted by ntenny
    So the cyanotype is from the paper negative, is that right? Or is there an intermediate sunprint stage? I'll take a look over at DPUG, but it sounds like there are major parts of this process that are on-topic here...

    -NT
    hi NT

    welll
    the whole first half i can't talk about cause it was made with 0's and 1's
    but the second half i can talk about ... staples made it for me with xeroxigraphical technology
    a truely archival internegative made with toner, paper and a heat-drum ...
    i used cheap canning wax ( paraffin ) and rubbed it on the backside of the print ..
    then in the printing frame with the classic formula coated butcher-paper ...
    i would have made the negative with my trusty cannon printer, but the ink smears ..
    so miss staples had to help me in the creation of this true hybrid "masterpiece"

    i have another one taking a nap in the winter sun as i type this ( been there for 4 hours )

    thanks for lookin' !

    john
  5. ntenny's Avatar
    Thanks, I think I get it. So the inter"negative" is more opaque than a conventional negative, hence the outrageously long exposure? I'm used to cyanotypes in the 10-15-minute range---maybe that's because of a newer formula, but still, 2 days seems extreme!

    -NT
  6. jnanian's Avatar
    yeah it takes a while since it is not on clear film base, but i don't mind waiting.
    it gives me time to reflect, have lunch and knit a sweater ..
    when they don't come out, i feel like i waited in line at the DMV for 3 hours
    and they close the window just as i arrive ...
  7. NedL's Avatar
    I like it. How was it toned?
  8. newcan1's Avatar
    John I love the pic. But can I implore you, next time to leave the Dcam at home? A beautiful silver negative could have laid the foundation for this masterpiece, and you would not then have been locked out of your APUG home.

    I forgive you. We all succumb to the bits and bytes from time to time.
  9. jnanian's Avatar
    hi nedL and newcan1

    its not toned, but selectively bleached with washing soda so the greens and yellows and blues kind of intermingle.
    i know what you mean newcan1 ... but i'm working on test prints for a non-silver project ... as much as i would
    have loved to use a camera and film ... for this project at least, its gotta be 1's and 0s
    it helps my materials costs are next to nil

    - john


 

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