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author, comments, date, layout, slug, title, wordpress_id
| author | comments | date | layout | slug | title | wordpress_id |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chris Hodapp | true | 2010-12-30 23:09:09+00:00 | post | cyanotypes-better-results | Cyanotypes & better results | 473 |
Lack of some amount of sunshine is rarely a problem here, it seems. I did this next cyanotype outdoors in very overcast light while it was snowing lightly. The snow was minor since a sheet of glass covered everything, and overcast light possibly was perfect because of how even and omnidirectional it was. The contrast that I got in this print surprised me; the dark areas just turned out so much darker than the last print.
[caption id="attachment_474" align="alignnone" width="530" caption="Same paper & solution, but exposed in overcast sunlight. "]
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I still had sensitizer left, so I decided to try some prints on fabric as well. These I exposed for almost 2 hours, maybe longer, under a 200 watt bulb. They didn't turn out as even as I'd like, but I was rushing things a bit and some spots of the towel weren't fully dry when I started exposing. However, I'm still impressed with how it turned out.
[caption id="attachment_475" align="alignnone" width="685" caption="Exposure on a towel from Target; exposed ~ 2 hours under 200 W bulb."]
[/caption]
[caption id="attachment_476" align="alignnone" width="685" caption="Same towel up close(ish)"]
[/caption]
Rob next door to the Hive loaned me a halftone negative he had (since I had nothing else on hand in the way of transparencies) and I made a few exposures of this, but had some problems with the highlights. I really should find some negatives that aren't monochrome (as this was, being a halftone image) so I can figure out how to get the tones right.