[alt-photo] Flaking casein print

Matti Koskinen mjkoskin at gmail.com
Wed Sep 26 10:16:05 GMT 2012


▼ Hide quoted text hi,

I've done recently casein prints using acrylic paints, and till yesterday
with various success., sometimes really good results. I have used always
the same mixture of casein (made from cottage cheese and ammonia) + equal
amount of casein and pot dichromate + black acrylic paint. I've used the
same method to develop, first soaking the print abt. 5 mins in lukewarm
water and then roller developing with diluted dish washing liquid like
tempera prints. Tempera prints have never stick well on the paper like
casein. I size the paper with PVAc. First 1 part glue + 3 parts water, let
it dry, then another coating with 1 part glue and 1 part water. Have worked
fine. Diluted gesso leaves too uneven coat. Yesterday the print was all
black, no colour got off. Day before yesterday just ok. I think the problem
was too hot hairdryer. Now I made a new print, coating A3 paper and cutting
into two A4, just to test the first piece. It flaked really badly. Only the
dark parts of print stayed on the paper. I increased the exposure time.
Better result, but bad flaking. The print was very contrasty, only black
and white, and the white parts got off with bad flaking. Earlier the prints
have showed nice tones from pure black to white.

One thing I can think of is that the glue sizing was probably bit humid
with the succeeded prints, and thus the casein stuck on the paper. Even
long exposures (normally 3-4 mins) but even with 15 to 20 mins develop
fine, though it needs more force to the roller and takes much longer to
develop, but finally the image on the paper comes out fine.

But now just bad flaking and contrasty prints. The tap water comes from
hundred meter deep drilled well, so the water is not always the same, it
changes every now and then. I have somewhere a pH meter, but not found it
yet from the pile of junk including lenses, cables, amplifiers, computer
parts etc.

Any ideas?

tnx

-matti


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