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This is an expired paper photogram. What I have done is to place objects, in this case leaves (I also dribbled water on the paper), onto photographic paper and place this in the sun for a couple of hours.
The paper is not fixed because that removes the color, so the image is scanned. I then played with levels and curves to bring out the colors that exist within the paper.
Masked/photogram, silver gelatin print. This idea came to me out of no where. But those playground bubbles do look kind of intergalactic. (May)
I have been doing a little more work with expired paper photograms. For these images I use fogged photographic paper that has been given to me, place items on the paper (in this case, some leaves), and leave in the sun for a couple of hours. I then scan the paper and play around with Levels and Curves to get what I feel to be a pleasing representative color.
using the same leaf as I used recently for lumen prints, this time I used it as a photogram, then inverted.
photogram
(A photogram is a photographic image made without a camera by placing objects directly onto the surface of a light-sensitive material such as photographic paper and then exposing it to light.)
Sort of a photogram hybrid. I wanted to improve the sense of space with my photograms. I printed a photo of clouds onto the paper and then made a contact print of a photogram on top of it.
All things have a use, even photographic paper that was long ago expired and is fogged beyond use.
I have used many sheets of such paper to create photograms by placing objects on the paper and letting it sit in the sun for a few hours. The result is then scanned and manipulated with levels and curves in Photoshop. At times the results disappoint, but other times things work out well. In this particular image I moistened part of the paper before exposure.
More examples can be seen at glsmyth.com/Gallery.asp?G=Expired Paper.
black & white photogram - part of a series i did a couple of years ago.
has become a signature piece for me... and great fun to make :)
remember the darkroom? and the smell of chemicals?
e-mail: jparepir@gmail.com
Mi blog: joaquinparedes.wordpress.com/
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I think that was a quarter in the middle of the photo paper along with a light bulb in there somewhere. I splattered developer on to the paper with my fingers.