Then I got an email from my friend Bob. Turns out his brother makes his own cyanotypes. Then he dyes them in wine. Or he dyes them in coffee.

What is a cyanotype?
To create a cyanotype all you need is two chemicals, negative film, sunlight and water. The two chemicals dissolved in water become a photo-sensitive solution that you paint onto paper. After exposure to UV rays and rinsing in water, the two chemicals react in such a way that you are left with a permanent dye called Prussian Blue.

The process was discovered in 1842, but it didn't become photography until Anna Atkins got her hands on it a year later. Ms. Atkins -- a scientist who is credited as the first female photographer -- created a limited series of cyanotypes by pressing ferns and other botanical specimens onto the light sensitive paper and exposing them to sunlight.
Read more about cyanotypes in (on?) The Wiki.
[Photo Credits: Mark Hemauer, Anna Atkins cyanotypes via wikipedia.]
3 comments:
Interestingly you can also use coffee as a developer for black and white films.
http://www.rit.edu/~andpph/text-coffee.html
Hello,
Thanks for the kind words, it is nice to be noticed.
Mark
p.s. your blog is awesome!
Mark, I'm head over heels in love with your hummingbird image. Do you ever sell your work? Barter it? Loan it out? Please let me know! My email address is in my blogger profile...
Anon, neat idea about trying various household items as photo developers. I learned that coffee has protein. Who knew?
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