Van Dyke: Wash Cycle and Drying
Daniel Gregory
Lessons
Class Introduction
03:03 2Overview of the Alternative Process
03:31 3Overview of the Digital Negative Process
10:21 4Working with Black and White Digital: What You Need
09:17 5Working With Black and White Digital Images: Color Settings
08:33 6Working with Black and White Digital Images Lightroom
07:01 7Working With Black and White Digital Images Photoshop
11:57 8Working With Black and White Digital Images 3rd Party Plug-ins
07:29Avoiding Key Artifacts
20:26 10Creating the Step Wedge for Curve Corrections
39:00 11Organizing Your Adobe® Photoshop® Files and Curves
11:20 12Setting Up the Printer
20:24 13Lab Safety and Workspace Set-Up
03:49 14Setting the Maximum Black Time
12:06 15Getting the Initial Curve Test Numbers
20:04 16Correcting the Curve
20:37 17Printing the Curve
06:08 18Sharing Curves
08:50 19Caring for the Digital Negative
12:29 20Intro to Cyanotypes and Safety
07:46 21Paper and Brush Types
05:08 22Coating Process and Cyanotype Chemistry
12:17 23Making the Cyanotype Print
06:41 24Washing the Cyanotype Print
12:29 25Creating Cyanotypes Photograms
14:59 26Toning Cyanotypes and Cleaning Up the Darkroom
18:43 27Introduction to Van Dyke Printing
04:36 28Setting Up the Van Dyke Workstation
05:20 29Van Dyke Paper and Coating
05:10 30Van Dyke Exposure and Developing
32:30 31Van Dyke Troubleshooting and Resources
08:26 32Van Dyke: Split Toning
18:56 33Van Dyke: Wash Cycle and Drying
04:33 34Van Dyke: Clean Up Process
03:51 35Introduction to Platinum / Palladium Printing
14:15 36Platinum/Palladium Coating Chemistry and Safety
09:58 37Platinum/Palladium Paper and Coating Options
22:31 38Platinum/Palladium Exposure and Development
22:31 39Platinum/Palladium: Equipment and Supplies
16:48 40Ink Jet Negative Coating and Exposure
15:25 41Platinum/Palladium Chemistry Options
07:50 42Ink Jet Negative Development
03:45 43Platinum/Palladium Waxing Images
08:40 44Platinum/Palladium Troubleshooting and Resources
27:19 45Sharing Your Work Digitally
14:49 46Archivability
10:39 47Matting and Framing Options
30:22 48Editions and Signing Options
13:54 49Alternative Processes: Further Exploration
07:25Lesson Info
Van Dyke: Wash Cycle and Drying
Okay, the other piece that I recommend when you're working with the van dyke process is when you're drying the print, just like before with the cyanotype, you're gonna want to take the print, you want to make sure it is completely, completely washed. The actual fix of the fixes left in there, it can also cause some changes in the print quality and make it less archival. There's a weird discussion in the way photography works. We need all the fix to be removed for it to be permanent and archival, but yet a little bit of fix left in the paper makes it more archival. So if you start to read in-depth into this, you can quickly start chasing your tail like a dog. The general rule to think about is, I want the fixer out of my paper. So we come out of that fix and you did not watch that step, which is why I want to emphasize it. It's then gonna go into another water bath that you didn't see because it's off-camera that Gina's taking care of. That wash needs to be 20 to 30 minutes and even if ...
I go into a hypo clear, I still am gonna wash for 20 to 30 minutes and it's not a high-powered wash. So don't take your garden hose and be spraying off the paper. It's literally just a light flow of water across the paper or a multiple-cycle change of the water, about a change of eight to nine times of the water in the tray, which you're gonna do some gentle agitation. You're gonna shuffle the prints if you have multiple prints and then cycle the water that way if you're in a water conservation effort. A lot of water gets wasted in darkrooms by people in many ways, over-washing their work. So there's a point where you are over-washing. So somewhere in that 15 to 20 minutes of a low water volume or several cycle changes of the water. The other piece in the wash cycle that I like to do is everything in this process I've been doing face-up so I can watch what's happening and experiment with the different pieces, but in the wash I like to cycle the prints and I keep them back-to-back. So I don't want emulsion-to-emulsion because that's where the chemistry is that I want to leech off and I want to wash off. So I make sure that the prints are always stored back-to-back when they go into a wash cycle and it doesn't matter if it's cyanotype, platinum, van dyke, any film, silver gelatin, they're always back-to-back and then that way, the water that's flowing around is actually moving across the surface that's been sensitized. Then I shuffle those prints so that the print that's on the bottom gets to come to the top, they get flipped. So there's a randomization to that in the water because I'm attempting to also create kind of a random water flow so that the different images will cycle through and move that way. Once the prints come out of the wash, if your paper's strong enough, again, you can just clip. A van dyke is not doing anything to the paper to make it anymore delicate, like a cyanotype, same thing. So if you can hang and clip the arches platine and let it hang dry, that's fine, or you can put them on those screen surfaces to let them dry. The other thing you can use is, Gina, can you bring me the blotter book? Yeah. So this is another thing you can get which is called a blotter book and we used to see these a lot in the silver gelatin darkroom because you would wash your prints and they wouldn't be dry and you wanted to take them home because you needed to drive somewhere. So there's this thing called a blotter book and what it is is a book that comes in a variety of different sizes and it has the tissue paper. And then, this is a really heavy art paper, like a really heavy watercolor paper that'll absorb water. So basically, your gonna hang your print dry and get as much water off or a squeegee. So if your in a place you can squeegee the back of the print, lightly squeegee the back of the print, and then you can stick it in here and stick it between the tissue paper and the heavier paper, and then you print a print, and then you can stick them into the blotter book, and then you can transport them this way. But this will also help them dry and store that way. So you get images that can be moved so if you're working in a lab somewhere or you're working in friend's house or something, you can take these and then you can move forward with that. But a blotter book is a great thing. I've had this for years and years and years and it has moved hundreds of prints and has held up reasonably well. It's starting to fall apart a little bit, but it's not a one and done kind of purchase. You can hold on to those for a long time.
Class Materials
Ratings and Reviews
Diordna
For a long time, I have read, studied and tried alternative processing, mainly Platinum/Palladium printing. I want to create longest lasting prints and may be share the info at Creative Live. But this presentation saved me many a hours. A few minutes into the lecture, I purchased the class and as the class progressed, I was extremely glad. Thank you Creative Live, thank you Daniel Gregory.
SFX
Excellent class on Alt Process and fantastic bonus materials included with purchase!!! I have extensive digital printing and darkroom experience but haven't done much alt-process to date. This is perfect timing for me as I have several personal projects that I would like to re-visit using some of these techniques. Thank you Daniel!!!
James H Johnson
I have been making platinum/palladium prints for about 1 year. This is the 3rd workshop that I have attended. The first two were one on one. Daniel has done a fantastic job of covering the material and explained the process it detail and easy to understand. This course is fantastic and highly recommend it.