Hi Leezy, about cutting up and reassembling film & prints...
for contact printing you are not limited to any particular size, the
construction can be as BIG as you like. It doesn't even have to be
permanent - shift the pieces around from print to print. Also, mix in some
neat physical stuff (the kind you use for photograms), paint, markers and
other things that come to mind. This is great fun. If you make things to a
size that fits in the enlarger you can project them.
Jim K

----- Original Message -----
From: <b2myo...@aol.com>
To: <bpro...@acsu.buffalo.edu>; <pinhole-discussion@p at ???????>
Sent: Friday, December 08, 2000 8:43 AM
Subject: Re: [pinhole-discussion] pinhole movie


>
> In a message dated 12/8/00 7:23:54 AM, bpro...@acsu.buffalo.edu writes:
>
> << Anyway, there is a genre of experimental film
> in which the artists just lays the film out and stamps, paints, and
> scratches it, then processes it sloppily and awaits the surprises in
> projection.  Film frames are ignored.  Registration is ignored.   >>
>
> Ohhhhh, I love it. This is right up my alley. This can be used for cutting
up
> the frames, taping them back together for a 4" x 5" or 8" x 10" negative
and
> then contact printed....or enlarging??????? You do this in a black room
> before developing? What else?
> leezy
>
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