The Journey's End (30 x 20 inch hand-printed cyanotype photograph)
(20 x 30 inch original hand-printed cyanotype photograph)
Unframed.
Signed on the back by the artist.
Ships rolled in a tube.
This is a much larger hand-printed version of the same image using the antique cyanotype process from the 1800s. It is printed on cotton watercolor paper by hand like the others. All of my hand-printed cyanotype photographs are “contact photos”, which means that the large negative is exactly the same size as the paper that the photo is printed on because the negative is laid directly on top of the paper while it is being exposed.
These pines here are in the woods near my house across the bay from San Francisco. They are especially magical emerging from the fog on mornings like this one, which are quite frequent regardless of the season.
This is one of several smaller studies for a much larger larger print of the same photograph I'm going to make. I test the ideal exposure time and range of values (contrast) before I waste larger more expensive paper. In a few days I'll have larger sizes available.
The paper is a heavy 100% cotton watercolor paper. Slight variations of shades of blue exist from print to print as each sheet of paper was hand-painted with photo chemicals in the dark and printed in natural sunlight with variations in the weather and intensity of light causing some prints to be darker than others.
(20 x 30 inch original hand-printed cyanotype photograph)
Unframed.
Signed on the back by the artist.
Ships rolled in a tube.
This is a much larger hand-printed version of the same image using the antique cyanotype process from the 1800s. It is printed on cotton watercolor paper by hand like the others. All of my hand-printed cyanotype photographs are “contact photos”, which means that the large negative is exactly the same size as the paper that the photo is printed on because the negative is laid directly on top of the paper while it is being exposed.
These pines here are in the woods near my house across the bay from San Francisco. They are especially magical emerging from the fog on mornings like this one, which are quite frequent regardless of the season.
This is one of several smaller studies for a much larger larger print of the same photograph I'm going to make. I test the ideal exposure time and range of values (contrast) before I waste larger more expensive paper. In a few days I'll have larger sizes available.
The paper is a heavy 100% cotton watercolor paper. Slight variations of shades of blue exist from print to print as each sheet of paper was hand-painted with photo chemicals in the dark and printed in natural sunlight with variations in the weather and intensity of light causing some prints to be darker than others.
(20 x 30 inch original hand-printed cyanotype photograph)
Unframed.
Signed on the back by the artist.
Ships rolled in a tube.
This is a much larger hand-printed version of the same image using the antique cyanotype process from the 1800s. It is printed on cotton watercolor paper by hand like the others. All of my hand-printed cyanotype photographs are “contact photos”, which means that the large negative is exactly the same size as the paper that the photo is printed on because the negative is laid directly on top of the paper while it is being exposed.
These pines here are in the woods near my house across the bay from San Francisco. They are especially magical emerging from the fog on mornings like this one, which are quite frequent regardless of the season.
This is one of several smaller studies for a much larger larger print of the same photograph I'm going to make. I test the ideal exposure time and range of values (contrast) before I waste larger more expensive paper. In a few days I'll have larger sizes available.
The paper is a heavy 100% cotton watercolor paper. Slight variations of shades of blue exist from print to print as each sheet of paper was hand-painted with photo chemicals in the dark and printed in natural sunlight with variations in the weather and intensity of light causing some prints to be darker than others.