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Ive always had some really cool plastic Maori tiki's - so I thought why not make them into a photogram.
An unusal spin on kiwiana
This is a photogram, is a photographic image made (without a camera) by placing objects directly onto the surface of a photo-sensitive material such as photographic paper and then exposing it to light. The result is a silhouetted image varying in darkness based on the transparency of the objects used, with areas of the paper that have not received any light appearing light and those that have appearing dark, according to the laws of photosensitivity.
Here holding my favourite Ice Rubik's Cube .
Este es un fotograma, una fotografÃa hecha sin cámara, colocando objetos directamente en una superficie fotosensible, como papel fotográfico y exponiéndolos a la luz de una ampliadora, el resultado es una silueta, que varia en obscuridad, basada en la transparencia de los objetos usados.
A photogram that I did for class. I used a bunch of different leaves and flowers found outside the darkroom. look at the bottom slightly to the lift and see the little spider that wanted part of the pic.
At college we've started our 'dark room' brief called Shadows and Light. To get us started using the dark room we were allowed to do photograms. Photograms are basically photographic images made without a camera.
We used Ilford Multigrade Resin Coated Photographic Paper (I'm not too sure what finish it is.) to make our photograms on.
I exposed some scrunched up bubble wrap and a cellophane wrapper from somebodies new sketch book for about 5-10 seconds. To develop the paper I put some developer in to a spray bottle and sprayed it on the paper, waiting about 40 seconds between sprays. After 3 times of doing the sprays, the spray nozzle on my bottle broke so I used a dish washing brush to lightly dab the developer on to the paper. I then finished the paper in the stop, fix and wash solution for the correct amount of time. Once I had developed this sheet, I really liked how it didn't look like what I had put on to the paper. I think it looks like a sheep head on the right side of the paper and a field in the background however a few people who have looked at this have said how it looks like a dinosaur.
Not the best photogram... As you can tell it was my first shot. But I do love the effects you get from water bottles!
cyanotype photogram made from ChainMetal medieval headdress - fun with solar photography and creativity
Glass daguerreotype
Becquerel developed.
DagerrotÃpiáim, avagy kortárs dagerrotÃpiák. Contemporary daguerreotype
My first ever photogram. A spring, my scarf and an old necklace given to me by a very good friend of mine. I was so excited to see the image come out from nothing on the white photographic paper. Playing in the darkroom with light sensitive paper has been, so far, the most exciting lesson I have ever taken. I hope to do a lot more!
Photogram backlit from a lightbox, overlaid with textured paper, coloured gel, and skeleton leaves, and then photographed.
Simply made by the sitter laying their head on the easel of a colour enlarger, and exposing them for 10 seconds. All colour variants are completely natural, no editing involved! The colour variants come form the colour of a persons hair, their skin tone, their clothing, and the distance they were from the paper. Straight from the RA4 print machine! Lovely!