Evening Bay Laurel I (40 x 26 inches UNFRAMED original botanical cyanotype on paper)

$1,000.00

(Original botanical cyanotype on paper, 40 x 26 inches)

Hand-printed cyanotype on heavy 100% cotton watercolor paper.

Unframed. Free shipping to the US.

NOTE: All the Bay Laurel and Night Laurel prints are 4 inches WIDER than the Chinese Elm prints of the same height (40 inches).

This looks like an aquatint etching, it is technically not a form of printmaking but rather a form of camera-less photography. Cyanotypes are a 19th century form of lensless photography also known as photograms, blueprints and sun prints. They resemble block prints or etchings but use no ink nor printing press. Light “etches” the image onto light-sensitive paper.

Traditional single-exposure cyanotype prints are a solid dark blue with a crisp white silhouette. My cyanotypes of varying shades of blue are triple-exposure and sometimes quadruple-exposure cyanotypes. Plant cuttings are arranged on paper previously coated with light-sensitive chemicals and then rearranged in different locations on the same paper, taking it in and out of sunlight, and then re-exposing the paper to light multiple times, creating ghostly overlapping images. The effect is like moonlight or sunlight through leaves.

My botanical cyanotypes are each one-of-a-kind slow camera-less photographs made outdoors using natural light and no film negative. There is no lens, no etched plate, no ink or printing press. There is no way to reproduce exactly the same print even if the same plant cuttings are kept and used in a series before they wilt. As much time is spent planning the exact composition and carefully timing the separate exposures as in the final exposure and the rinsing.

ADD TO CART: Price already includes sales tax and free shipping to the United States.

(Original botanical cyanotype on paper, 40 x 26 inches)

Hand-printed cyanotype on heavy 100% cotton watercolor paper.

Unframed. Free shipping to the US.

NOTE: All the Bay Laurel and Night Laurel prints are 4 inches WIDER than the Chinese Elm prints of the same height (40 inches).

This looks like an aquatint etching, it is technically not a form of printmaking but rather a form of camera-less photography. Cyanotypes are a 19th century form of lensless photography also known as photograms, blueprints and sun prints. They resemble block prints or etchings but use no ink nor printing press. Light “etches” the image onto light-sensitive paper.

Traditional single-exposure cyanotype prints are a solid dark blue with a crisp white silhouette. My cyanotypes of varying shades of blue are triple-exposure and sometimes quadruple-exposure cyanotypes. Plant cuttings are arranged on paper previously coated with light-sensitive chemicals and then rearranged in different locations on the same paper, taking it in and out of sunlight, and then re-exposing the paper to light multiple times, creating ghostly overlapping images. The effect is like moonlight or sunlight through leaves.

My botanical cyanotypes are each one-of-a-kind slow camera-less photographs made outdoors using natural light and no film negative. There is no lens, no etched plate, no ink or printing press. There is no way to reproduce exactly the same print even if the same plant cuttings are kept and used in a series before they wilt. As much time is spent planning the exact composition and carefully timing the separate exposures as in the final exposure and the rinsing.

(Original botanical cyanotype on paper, 40 x 26 inches)

Hand-printed cyanotype on heavy 100% cotton watercolor paper.

Unframed. Free shipping to the US.

NOTE: All the Bay Laurel and Night Laurel prints are 4 inches WIDER than the Chinese Elm prints of the same height (40 inches).

This looks like an aquatint etching, it is technically not a form of printmaking but rather a form of camera-less photography. Cyanotypes are a 19th century form of lensless photography also known as photograms, blueprints and sun prints. They resemble block prints or etchings but use no ink nor printing press. Light “etches” the image onto light-sensitive paper.

Traditional single-exposure cyanotype prints are a solid dark blue with a crisp white silhouette. My cyanotypes of varying shades of blue are triple-exposure and sometimes quadruple-exposure cyanotypes. Plant cuttings are arranged on paper previously coated with light-sensitive chemicals and then rearranged in different locations on the same paper, taking it in and out of sunlight, and then re-exposing the paper to light multiple times, creating ghostly overlapping images. The effect is like moonlight or sunlight through leaves.

My botanical cyanotypes are each one-of-a-kind slow camera-less photographs made outdoors using natural light and no film negative. There is no lens, no etched plate, no ink or printing press. There is no way to reproduce exactly the same print even if the same plant cuttings are kept and used in a series before they wilt. As much time is spent planning the exact composition and carefully timing the separate exposures as in the final exposure and the rinsing.

Celadon Bamboo (FRAMED in a 31 x 25 x 1.5 inch white solid wood frame.)
$700.00
Yellow Summer Grass (12 x 16 inch original yellow toned cyanotype on paper)
Sale Price:$150.00 Original Price:$200.00
sale
Misty Iris (18 x 24 inch original handmade cyanotype /monotype)
$300.00
Indigo Maple Triptych (three FRAMED cyanotypes, 31 x 25" each, totaling 31 x 75")
Sale Price:$1,800.00 Original Price:$2,500.00
sale
Pale Blue Maple (original UNFRAMED 22 x 30 inch botanical cyanotype on paper)
$400.00
sold out