Re: Slowest development / was Re: emergency question regarding cyanotype

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From: Morgan Doud (wernca@yahoo.com)
Date: 03/31/03-09:45:14 AM Z


Binh Danh in San Jose CA has been doing what he calls
chlorophyll prints. He exposes a neg onto a leaf in
sunlight for days at a time (depends on weather) and
gets amazingly detailed prints. He "fixes" the print
by casting the leaf in resin.
 
--- David Harris <david.j.harris2@ntlworld.com> wrote:
> How does he fix the image?
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Darryl Baird" <dbaird@umflint.edu>
> To: <alt-photo-process-l@sask.usask.ca>
> Sent: Monday, March 31, 2003 4:09 PM
> Subject: Re: Slowest development / was Re: emergency
> question regarding
> cyanotype
>
>
> > Yes, I saw some of this work (same photographer?)
> at the Canon Gallery
> > at the V&A. It was mounted on a wall... really
> amazing. My students
> > were knocked out by just the concept alone. Talk
> about image "depth."
> >
> > Darryl
> >
> > On Monday, March 31, 2003, at 10:04 AM, Paul
> Martinez wrote:
> >
> > > Actually there is a photographer/gardner in the
> UK (I
> > > think) that "prints" on turf grass. The guy
> projects
> > > negatives onto grass under some sort of tent and
> the
> > > areas that get light turn green, while the areas
> in
> > > shadow get yellowed out.
> > >
> > >
> > > --- Bill Collins <photo@intrex.net> wrote:
> > >> I suppose you could tape a negative to the roof
> of
> > >> your car and find an image in the faded paint
> > >> underneath after a decade or so! Is moss
> growing on
> > >> the North side of a tree (South in the southern
> > >> hemisphere) a photographic process?
> > >>
> > >> Bill
> > >>
> > >> ---------- Original Message
> > >> ----------------------------------
> > >> From: Phillip Murphy <pmurf@bellsouth.net>
> > >> Reply-To: alt-photo-process-l@sask.usask.ca
> > >> Date: Sun, 30 Mar 2003 16:52:58 -0600
> > >>
> > >>> It would be curious to see a list of slowest
> > >> alt-photo processes. Not that one
> > >>> can not drag these
> > >>> processes out ( example would be many many
> layers
> > >> in building an image). But a
> > >>> list of process insensitivity to
> > >>> actinic light would interesting.
> > >>
> > >
> >
>
>

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