From: Kris Erickson (kerickso@ryerson.ca)
Date: 07/31/02-11:43:33 AM Z
Sorry, I was just joking around with you. I was implying that, in my 400 sq.
foot bachelor, my living room is my bedroom is my 'salon' is my drying room,
etc. etc.
When I can afford something better after school (gulp: i hope!), all my alt
desires will eventually be fulfilled (i.e. drying room much like your
suggestion, my own UV exposure unit, tubs, sinks... ahhh, to dream....)
YES dust bunnies are a problem--so you have to move VERY slowly to avoid
disturbing their slumber. They tend to run directly toward drying surfaces
when startled....
Sometimes though, and not to contradict you, those puddles ARE desireable.
They give some je ne sais quoi to the right image(s) when printed; perhaps
as an alternative to visible brush strokes (or alongside brush strokes--it
all depends I guess).
Most of the time, and especially when your negatives get stuck, puddles are
the least desirable things in the world.
Forever blue,
kris
-----Original Message-----
From: Judy Seigel [mailto:jseigel@panix.com]
Sent: July 31, 2002 12:06 AM
To: alt-photo-process-l@skyway.usask.ca
Cc: alt-photo-process-error@skyway.usask.ca
Subject: RE: Quickee Cyanotype Question
On Tue, 30 Jul 2002, Kris Erickson wrote:
> Uhh... drying room? I tend to coat at midnight and put lay the paper all
> over my floor to dry until morning(except in the places where I expect to
> step before I realize that, in a half-awake state, I coated cyanotype the
> night before). The fan helps me sleep.
> ;-)
The drying room is a 3 foot-wide space behind a supply cabinet with a bar
overhead with a lightproof black cloth hanging from it, and 5 shelves made
from fiberglass screens supported on 10-penny nails hammered into the wall
to the left and the back of cabinet at the right.
It's not totally dark, wouldn't do for silver gelatin, but for alt
materials is quite dark enough and EXTREMELY convenient , not to mention
that I have virtually no open floor space, so couldn't try your system --
even if I slept night hours rather than day hours, and didn't have an inch
of dust bunnies all over the floor.
If you've got all that floor space, you probably could rig up a "drying
room" somewhere, and then, I promise, will wonder how you lived without
it.
PS. If you put the shelves at a slant, that is not perfectly horizontal,
puddles will tend to stream off at the lower end, eliminating the "sticky
spots," or at least putting them out of the image area.
Judy
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