I found an additional article, as well as some notes I printed out a few years
ago. The scans can be found at:
http://dripinvesting.org/Chromo/Untitled-1.jpg
http://dripinvesting.org/Chromo/Untitled-2.jpg
http://dripinvesting.org/Chromo/Untitled-3.jpg
...
http://dripinvesting.org/Chromo/Untitled-19.jpg
http://dripinvesting.org/Chromo/Untitled-20.jpg
http://dripinvesting.org/Chromo/Untitled-21.jpg
Just change the website address each time to get all 21 pages. I left the
pages rather large so that they can be printed out, so if you have a dial-up
connection they may take a while. If you cannot handle the size then please
let me know and I will make them smaller (the quality will suffer). I'll leave
these up for a month or so.
Cheers -
george
--- Gerry Giliberti <GGILIBERTI@controlotron.com> wrote:
> Schuyler,
>
> I have the original pages from the Scientific America article including the
> photos. I just have to find it again. It was given to me in the early 90s
> by a sculptor friend of mine who thought it would be of interest to me. (Yet
> another technique I never got around to fooling with.) If you can't get a
> back copy from your library, e-mail me and I'll scan it and make a pdf copy
> of it for you. Some of his chemical techniques are described under the
> photos, if I remember correctly, rather than in the article text itself,
> which you can easily find on the Internet. The images are really unusual and
> highly abstract.
>
> Gerry
>
> gerrygiliberti@juno.com
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Schuyler Grace [mailto:schuyler@bellsouth.net]
> Sent: Wednesday, November 23, 2005 5:10 PM
> To: alt-photo-process-l@sask.usask.ca
> Subject: RE: Chromoskedasic Paining (was: Color Images from B/W Paper)
>
>
> Well, Michael (my brother) got back from the Heard Museum and gave me some
> more details. The artist/biologist is Dominic Man-Kit Lam, and the process
> is called chromoskedasic painting. Does anyone know of a site with examples
> of his other others' work in this medium or other information regarding the
> process? All I have found so far is referenced to a book of images he had
> published.
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Schuyler Grace [mailto:schuyler@bellsouth.net]
> Sent: Wednesday, November 23, 2005 2:40 PM
> To: alt-photo-process-l@sask.usask.ca
> Subject: RE: Color Images from B/W Paper
>
> Thank you, Loris! That was exactly what I needed.
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Loris Medici [mailto:loris_medici@mynet.com]
> Sent: Wednesday, November 23, 2005 2:26 PM
> To: alt-photo-process-l@sask.usask.ca
> Subject: RE: Color Images from B/W Paper
>
> It was named "lumen prints". Also with "lithprinting" you can get colors (in
> the same image) with B/W papers.
>
> Regards,
> Loris.
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Schuyler Grace [mailto:schuyler@bellsouth.net]
> Sent: 23 Kasım 2005 Çarşamba 22:00
> To: Alt Photo Process Mailinglist
> Subject: Color Images from B/W Paper
>
> A short while back, there was a long discussion on the list about a process
> that used old B/W paper to make wonderfully colored images. My brother, who
> is visiting for the holiday, mentioned knowing a fellow biologist who
> stumbled across such a process a number of years ago in his lab, and I
> wanted to show him some examples to see if it was the same thing.
> Unfortunately, I can't find any of the old e-mails in my inbox or sites
> among my saved favorites (or even remember what the process was being
> called).
>
> Could someone point me to a Website with examples of this type of work or
> perhaps an article in one of the photography rags (I have a good collection
> of View Camera, if that helps)?
>
> Thanks!
>
> -Schuyler
>
>
>
Handmade Photographic Images - http://www.GLSmyth.com
DRiP Investing - http://DRiPInvesting.org
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Received on Tue Nov 29 13:25:52 2005
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