PJWphoto
Foxhole
Shot while visiting family, not far from Ardendrain. I’m currently working on a gum print of this image.
Crickets and tumbleweed
yes its been pretty quiet around here for a while.
there are a couple of posts that I have planned to work on for a while now and hope to soon stop procrastinating and get to it!
To start the ball rolling, today i finally got round to updating the wordpress software that the site runs on. It doesn’t change much but hopefully helps keep the site stable and happy. It also gets my head back into the frame of mind to work on these pages and keep everything up to date.
to get a flavour of what I have been working on you can take a look at my flickr page.
I now have a flatbed scanner (with transparency hood) and have been busy wading through folders of negatives and slides and working on images that I haven’t even looked at for years(well…some of them).
so no more slides photographed on a light box will be appearing on my photostream, Just juicy scans!
Basically I have been spending plenty of time in front of the computer editing images, but it means I have been able to produce prints of some of my colour negs for the first time in about a year thanks to trumps and their durst epsilon printer.
but most importantly, I am also itching to get back into gum printing again and will be posting progress when that happens.
watch this space
pete
Cyanotype Gelatin Printing
One of the great things about combining traditional photo process work with the information always instantly available on the internet is that I am never short of inspiration for new things to try. Last year one of these things to try came from this post on printing onto fixed silver gelatin paper. The discussion started out looking for a use for unneeded resin coated paper, the most intriguing suggestion came from the ingenious mind of Ron Mowrey (Ex-Kodak emulsion R&D technician who goes by the moniker Photo Engineer). He sugessted using a mix of cyanotype chemistry in gelatin to coat the paper giving a glossy cyanotype image bonded to the coated surface of the paper.
while sorting through my boxes of experiments and test prints, I rediscovered the tests that were sparked by this discussion. As i didn’t have a lot of photo paper that I would consider “spare” I used ilford inkjet paper that stated that it was coated with baryta (the same mineral that is coated onto traditional fiber based black & white photo paper). I found that I had some problems with the emulsion frilling and lifting off the paper, especially at the edges, but I suspect that that may be related to some additional coating that is designed for recieving and drying the inkjet ink.
Additional information, transcribed from my notebook:
- Cyanotype is thickened with gelatin for adhesion and gloss
- Gelatin content should be around 10%
ie. 50% [sensitiser] / 50% [gelatin 20%] - Gelatin should be hardened
10% Glyoxal or Crome alumFormailin and Glyoxal will react with ferricyanide over time (heat + time are the enemy)
- Coating of around 10ml per sq foot
- Coating should be hardened for 4 -8 hours
Details of paper coating:
- Prepaired in a shot glass @ 40-50 C
- 4ml 20& gelatin
- 2ml Cyanotype sol A
- 2ml Cyanotype sol B
- 1 drop 20% tween20 (non-ionic surfacant)
- 2 drop Formalin (hardener)
The paper (Ilford FB AL inkjet paper) was coated with the hot gelatin mix using a hake brush, working quickly for an even coat and stopping brushing before the gelatin starts to cool and hold brush strokes.
the coating was allowed to set for around 30 mins before being hung up on a line to dry.while the paper was drying a few dark blue spots appeared which i chalked up to dust or other contaminants in the coating(but there was still enough workable surface for my tests). After 4 hours the surface was smooth, dry and very glossy. however there seemed to be a slight fogging ( probably that reaction with the formalin that Ron warned about) that had turned the sheets a sort of powder blue.
I continued to the exposures without hesitation, using a couple of T-55 negatives that I was familiar with and a couple of recent pinhole shots.
As you can see in the prints, the fogging remains and there is a slight yellowing that I assume is caused by the gelatin holding onto the unexposed sensitiser. This might have been removed by further washing but as I said earlier I was having problems with the emulsion lifting from the paper and did not want to leave the prints in water longer than necessary. Most of the prints that I found today have wrinkles on the borders as evidence of this.I recall that with one print I tried to lift the coating clear of the paper to transfer it to a sheet of water colour paper, ala polaroid emulsion lift. This was sort of successful in that it stayed intact and on the paper until it dried, where it promptly became detached and broke into a million little pieces!
Tim Rudman Lith Materials Update
Tim Rudman is a recognised authority on Lith printing, he has published a couple of books and runs workshops on the technique. If like me you are interested in lith printing, Tims periodical updates on the state of available papers that work with the process are invaluable reading.
his latest update is here
There are details of changes to the Kentmere range as Ilford takes over production, out go Kentona and Art Collection. But there is work under way for a new Kentona, whether it is lithable is another question.
Another sorry story is the discontinuation of Fotospeed lith, which was made by kentmere, but again Fotospeed are working on a successor, apparently to begin testing soon!
But to sign off on a high note, there is hope out there for anyone who misses Forte Polywarmtone. The wonderful people at Adox are proposing to bring this old favorite back, they need to people to sign up and buy up the first run of paper before production begins, so go here to check it out. I am confident they can pull it off, this is the same company that is Reviving Agfa MCC111, I received a sample pack of the first run and was very impressed, they should be starting full production later this year!
you can sign up to receive Tims newsletters on his website:
http://www.timrudman.com/
Lost in the Pub
The other night I was at the pub with a couple of friends and happened to have a pinhole cameras in my pocket. Although it was quite dark, I set the camera on the table we were sitting at and left it exposing while we chatted and drank away. Around midnight we all went our separate ways but the camera stayed, forgotten on the table. The next day, after not finding the camera in my jacket pocket I realised it was still at the pub and went to try and get it back. Someone had put it behind the bar at some point and thankfully it had not been opened, but the shutter was still open! I covered the pinhole and after finishing the roll (only a couple of shots) dropped it off for processing.
You can see the result above, the recorded experience of a camera lost in a pub for around 18 hours. The image is suitable confused, probably the result of it being picked up and moved throughout the day. I think it looks quite cool!
The film was an old roll of Kodak Gold 200 dated 06/2003 that’s been sitting in the camera for about 9 months so its pretty grainy and the colours are a bit funky. Without access to a negative scanner, I had to resort to photographing the negatives on a light box and adjust the images on the computer. Not ideal but it works well enough.
I’m thinking of doing this again (deliberately this time), but i don’t really want to lose the camera or spark some kind of security alert…although that could be fun too…..
meadows array

Edinburgh meadows with Aurthers Seat in background
Finding a Gallery
This is an interesting article on how to find a gallery to show your work. Although its not something I’m planning to do soon, it’s good to see how these things operate.
How to Do Your Homework by Edward Winkleman. Part two is here.
Its a good explanation of the art market and how to navigate it. Edward Winkleman is based in New York [his gallery is here] but his advise is worth reading, wherever you are based.
Pinhole Array

Sine-Square Oscillator as seen through 24 pinholes.
8 min exposure under 500W tungsten lamp.
paper negative photographed and inverted in photoshop.
more circles

High and low perspectives from multi-hole pinhole.
Circles

A good day for pinhole today, I’m playing with my new camera. here’s a preview from (cloudy) yesterday.
Camera details coming later.












