Here is a softer paint acrylic. It creates possibly a more flexible backing of the plate.
Screen capture of the 2 minute vid |
I exchanged a Luther G a 20 year veteran of wet plate and a man who has helped me many times in this journey to make 35x35 ambrotypes. Here is a note that I wrote to him on facebook today. We were discussing black glass versus clear glass as a substrate for Ambrotypes.
Clear glass left, black right |
LT to GY
The two images should look identical and would look identical if the variables were not inconsistent. Exposure or and develop it. You can see more detail within the bark on one of them that had more development. It is hard to do proof of concept images with such extreme variables.
GY to LG
will try to do exact copies on the two glasses giving the same exposure and development (at least as close as I can manage) in the spring. The problem I have with black glass is the flat feel to it (collodion on top instead of bottom) and the look of the varnish on the plate (probably poor technique on my part). I have seen some beauty black glass plates before first hand (Kurt M work). Will keep playing with it. I have quite a bit of black glass to use up in 4x5, 5x7 and 8x10 sizes. At present I prefer clear glass reversed by quite a big margin. I find them magical, special, like nothing I have done before in photography. I was worried that I had put the cart too far in front of the horse. The buying all this stuff and having all these wild over the top dreams without actually making plates was a fool errands, a huge mistake on my part. What If I did not like what I was striving to make?. Now that I have seen the small finished clear glass ambrotypes, I feel much better, I feel I have not made a mistake and am on the right track. Seeing the magic ambrotypes, holding them in my hand, has calmed me down. Like with all the photography when you see a finished work it excites you and pushes you forward to make more. I have so much more to learn and do but I I can see the finished larger images in my mind now, AND THEY ARE BEAUTIFUL!. I just need to chase thes photographs down, continue the pursuit, work harder. Everything will be OK in the end. Thanks as always for your help. Could not do this without you and others keeping me grounded and focused.
This quote made me laugh. Reminded me of what happened to me at a photo club I once belonged. They wanted photo review honesty, I gave them honesty, they got pissed! :) It's nice to have something in common with Carlin!
Thanks to James W for finding this quote.
“It is not the camera that counts, but the mind that’s behind it. It is the imagination that guides true photography”
Hi Everyone, Merry Xmas
"So long as you can dance, and be happy dancing, that's the best in the world!"
Like this clear glass tree version Ambrotype (viewing through the glass) better than the black glass version. Am excited about moving up in format size soonish.
Clear Glass version. |
Tree work...wet and dry. One is wet in the tray, the 2nd is dry with a warm light. It is reversed because now your looking through the glass at it.
Wet in the tray at the time of making |
Dried and coated with 2 layers of varnish and black acrylic paint. The pic in its finished form, you look through the glass at it (the reason for the reversal/flip of the image). |
Question asked about the dump hats, I kind of went overboard in the answer, as I tend to do with most Dump things.
MS WROTE:
Playing with a new camera set up at work today. Thinking of taking this deal to Thai. The body is a Hasselblad X1D, the lens is a Leica M 28-35-50mm F4 (Tri-Elmar).