Since then, he has " explored figurative imagery in silver, cyanotype, palladium, and digital prints, " while working with " Nimslo, Diana, Holga, " and conventional cameras, as well as an office scanner and video camera.
42.
The first photographically illustrated book ever published was a scientific book, Anna Atkins's " British Algae : Cyanotype Impressions, " issued serially beginning in 1843 . ( A surprising number of 19th-century scientist-photographers were women .)
43.
Opalotype is one of a number of early photographic techniques now generally consigned to historical status, including ambrotype, autochrome, cyanotype, daguerrotype, ivorytype, kallitype, orotone, and alternative photographic techniques and are practised by a small number of dedicated artists.
44.
Beginning in 2013, Beshty began production on a more than yearlong project that catalogues every used or exhausted object in his studio with cyanotype photogram prints on discarded papers, cardboard, wood, or any other cellulose-based material culled from his studio.
45.
Quilting Arts Workshop : Surface Design Essentials for the Printed Quilt-Released in the Fall of 2014, this instructional course by Sue is dedicated to teaching how to create unique fabric using four distinct surface design techniques : Thermofax, cyanotype, collagraph, and heliographic sun printing.
46.
These negatives are fine-grained, have a broad tonal range and are of extremely high resolution, on the order of 150 LP / mm, can create large prints and are suitable for contact printing, particularly involving Cyanotype and Van dyke brown to create'blueprint'and'sepia'prints respectively.
47.
All of them, until a certain size, can be achieved using a contact printer with an appropriate lamp ( ultraviolet, etc . . ) but for big engineering and architectural plans, the " heliographic copiers " used with the cyanotype and the diazotype technologies, are of the roller type, which makes them completely different from contact printers.
48.
"I'm planning to roast chestnuts in the fireplace then paint my mother, sister and brother with cyanotype chemicals and watch them turn blue, " he joked, alluding to the signature azure tint of his photographs, whose vintage allure derives from an obscure process invented by Sir John Herschel, the 19th-century British philosopher and astronomer.
49.
It was the only 19th-century photography technique that was not based on expensive silver halide chemistry but was still sensitive enough to use in a camera, with exposure times comparable to those of the daguerreotype and calotype . ( Other non-silver processes, such as the cyanotype, were practical only for making prints or photograms in direct sunlight . ) Modern testing of Pucher's photographs has confirmed their chemically unusual nature.
50.
In the " argot " of engineers, architects and designers, the resulting plan copies coming from any type of " heliographic copier " no matter they were either blue or white, were traditionally called blueprints, name derived from the blue background color of the cyanotype technique, which was the previous process for obtaining blueprints, When the diazo based compounds changed the background color to white, in technical environments,-by tradition-, the name for copies of technical drawings remained Blueprint, although in English-speaking countries, it was intended, without much success, to change the name from"