The man from the earlier color photo story.
Man in his dump shack home, THE FAMILIES OF THE DUMP, Mae Sot, Thailand, 2022 |
This woman lived in a small shack on the edge of the others. She was new to the dump, all alone and had nothing. We donated food to her 2 times, along with a headlamp and some other things. She seemed so strong, not sure what her life was like before or how she ended up here. I need to learn more Burmese.
Part of learning wet plate is studying the great photogs who used the process in the past. To that end I picked up a Carlton Watkins book tonight. Should be a great read, and a great way to learn.
ADVERT from Amazon.
"Carleton E. Watkins (1829-1916) is best remembered for his large-format photographs of the American West, especially those taken in Yosemite. This new volume, the latest in the popular In Focus series, is devoted to some of his smaller and unusually shaped works, including stereographs, albumen prints, and cabinet and boudoir cards--most of which have never before been published."
Tonight am spending some time working on some photos from the last Thai trip. New stuff, photos I have not seen since I made the exposures. Hoping to find new work that can be part the coming exhibitions at the University of New Brunswick. Have lots of files to go through, need to send them everything to the curator by August 1. Also want to do the wet plate work! Gosh not enough time in the day!! Got to retire!!!
Hasselblad X1D, 21mm lens.
Young boy next to the garbage dump, THE FAMILIES OF THE DUMP, Mae Sot, Thailand, 2022 |
Wet Plate is fun but oh so difficult!! Luckily I have online friends that help me get past my mistakes and ignorance. The latest question below:
I should probably not be buying this varnish now, I have many bills to pay. Still I am short of varnish and will need more for in the coming months. Picked up 4-32 ounce bottles for $192 CAD ($36.09 CAD per bottle), with free shipping to my front door.
The varnish I ordered. Before I used the high gloss, now going to just the gloss version. |
Thinking of taking the trailer/motor home out alone to make wet plate images, next week off. I need to overcome my errors and improve at the process. The only way I know of doing that, is working my ass off. That technique has worked in past photo learning experiences. I just keep my nose to the grindstone, till things turn for the better.
-6 C this morning at the Columbia Icefields, packing and onto Jasper today. The is me trying to figure out wet plate.
Not much of substance created this trip, still learning!! Wet plate works best around 20c the -6 temps did not help!
Stayed 2 nights here at the Columbia Icefields |
Me trying to learn Wet Plate, ITS TOUGH!! |
Dim Sum doing his cat thingy |
A good video that explains the basics of the wet plate collodion process. They make an albumen print.
Over the last several years I have been working on 2 wet plate type books.
Mounting a vintage lens I had in the closet for years, putting it on a Deardorff board to try with the 8x10. Will try shooting it next week during the first wet plate trip.
Ordered another 3 bottles of Collodion from Halifax. I think it cost about $275 CAD. I will be shooting 16x20 this year lots of collodion needed. I have the other chemicals I need in abundance. Cadmium bromide, Ammonium Iodide, alcohol I all have in abundance. The one chemical I am having trouble with is the raw collodion. I should have enough for now, have these 3 bottles, plus another 3 I ordered before, might also have a single bottle that is older as well (collodion only lasts so long then it expires).
I hope I can sell some duplicate AMBROTOS KANATA plates, that will offset some of the production costs.
Old collodion photo. My current collodion fav is the non ether added G (Gerry) stuff |
The motorhome and darkroom trailer coming along nicely. Hope they work well, had some plumbing issues last year. I am becoming a bit of a Mr. Fix It to save money now. You got to love YouTube they teach you to do all kinds of things. ]
The darkroom trailer is coming along. I stripped it down, cleaned it up and now am starting to load all the wet plate tools and chemicals Worked into the night, it was fun! I should be using it in the field again by May 18th! This is going to be fun. 8x10 and 16x20 work this year.