> Perhaps this is oversimplifying it, but what about inkjet transparency
> "paper"? I have never had occasion to use it (I have used the laser
> printer equivalent for non-photo printing), but I am pretty sure that I
> have seen that ink jet transparency sheets are available. That should
> el
I did some batik in school and we ironed them fabric on kraft paper to get
as much of the paraffin wax out as we could. It wouldn't all come out, but
what was left was quite uniform.
If you need a thick layer that's uniform, I don't know.
I wonder if there is a way to spray it while still hot. I
Hi:
I was able to tone the cyanotype T-shirts I made and inadvertently
"bleached" in the laundry. I soaked them in a tannic acid solution.
I did get impatient and add some vinegar - this speeded things up but
changed the tone to a purplish brown, instead of a reddish brown.
Will have to fiddle
ISBN 0-9649638-6-8
Colin
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Does anyone know the ISBN number for Dan's book please >
Ellis
i use a mac at work(im a snapper for a press agency)
but have a pc at home
i dont normally save pics in psd format preffering
either tiff or hi quality jpegs instead
regardless of file format i always append the file
extension and have never had any problems opening
files on my home pc
layered
Burkholters book recommends, and I heartily agree, using Pictorico brand
overhead transparency sheets. They are a good deal more expensive than
ordinary ones, but they seem to be the only ones that hold the ink well
enough to build density. Search for "Pictrico" on the web and you'll find
it. They
Ben,
Not to digress to much from your intention, but you
can skip the cyanotype all together and create vandyke
brown prints. The process is pretty much the same and
photoformulary kits are about the same price. It
produces a rich brown tone suited well for pinhole.
Don
> bendur...@aol.com wro