Tuesday, 17 December 2013
solarisation
Normal print exposed for 15 seconds, then placed in the developer, stop, fix and then rinse.
solarised print exposed for 15 seconds, then placed in the developer for 15 seconds and while still in the developer you walk out the darkroom and just quickly expose it to the light. Then you go back in the dark room and place in the stop, fix and then rinse.
solarised print exposed for 15 seconds, then placed in the developer for 20 seconds and while still in the developer you walk out the darkroom and just quickly expose it to the light. Then you go back in the dark room and place in the stop, fix and then rinse.
solarised print exposed for 15 seconds, then placed in the developer for 30 seconds and while still in the developer you walk out the darkroom and just quickly expose it to the light. Then you go back in the dark room and place in the stop, fix and then rinse.
test strip for normal print, exposing for 5 seconds while the rest of it is covered, then move over so more paper is exposed and another 5 seconds and just keep doing this until the whole strip is done. Then place in the developer, stop, fix and then rinse. You should be able to see where its underexposed, exposed at the correct time and then overexposed.
solarised print exposed for 15 seconds, then placed in the developer for 15 seconds and while still in the developer you walk out the darkroom and just quickly expose it to the light. Then you go back in the dark room and place in the stop, fix and then rinse.
solarised print exposed for 15 seconds, then placed in the developer for 20 seconds and while still in the developer you walk out the darkroom and just quickly expose it to the light. Then you go back in the dark room and place in the stop, fix and then rinse.
test strip for normal print, exposing for 5 seconds while the rest of it is covered, then move over so more paper is exposed and another 5 seconds and just keep doing this until the whole strip is done. Then place in the developer, stop, fix and then rinse. You should be able to see where its underexposed, exposed at the correct time and then overexposed.
sandwich negative
test strip
Once you have the timing right for your bottom image you add another negative into the neg holder. Next you expose your image then place in the developer, stop and fix.
I used the same image and solorised it however I don't think it worked well because its too dark and I should have exposed for less time while it was in the developer.
Monday, 16 December 2013
Maggie Taylor
Maggie Taylor is an artist who works with digital images and manipulation. She creates these images by scanning objects into a computer suing a flatbed scanner then layering and manipulating the images using Photoshop. She creates very surreal montage images.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)