jano
Evil Bokeh
Hi,
While strolling through the Getty one day,
In the very merry month of May,
I came across some prints..
That were not ink-jet but giclee, palladium, or gelatins...
And I wondered what the differences were, hey hey!

While strolling through the Getty one day,
In the very merry month of May,
I came across some prints..
That were not ink-jet but giclee, palladium, or gelatins...
And I wondered what the differences were, hey hey!
Last edited:
rogue_designer
Reciprocity Failure
all one print? Or several different prints?
Ie. one print was labeled - Giclee-palladium-gelatin?
Ie. one print was labeled - Giclee-palladium-gelatin?
jano
Evil Bokeh
Said the wee little jano to the funny man with horns on his head, a monocle in one eye and a camera over the other, "different prints!"
jan normandale
Film is the other way
why not just google .. wee little jano who has no avatar? Here's a starter
http://www.gicleeprint.net/abtGclee.shtm
http://www.gicleeprint.net/abtGclee.shtm
rogue_designer
Reciprocity Failure
ah - good.
Giclee is a fancy name for inkjet, typically with high quality pigment inks onto stable watercolor paper, etc. Computer files printed.
Gelatin is standard black and white silver paper - so called because the silver halide emulsion is suspended in a gelatin base on the paper. Usually enlarger prints - tho some contact prints are made this way.
Platinum, Palladium, or any combination of these are contact prints - so the print is the same size as the negative. The metals are usually hand coated in a chemical suspension onto the paper, and then exposed under UV lamps (or sunlight) for a good bit, then cleared and fixed. They are very archivally stable, and the oldest of the methods listed. (Think Edward Weston and such).
Giclee is a fancy name for inkjet, typically with high quality pigment inks onto stable watercolor paper, etc. Computer files printed.
Gelatin is standard black and white silver paper - so called because the silver halide emulsion is suspended in a gelatin base on the paper. Usually enlarger prints - tho some contact prints are made this way.
Platinum, Palladium, or any combination of these are contact prints - so the print is the same size as the negative. The metals are usually hand coated in a chemical suspension onto the paper, and then exposed under UV lamps (or sunlight) for a good bit, then cleared and fixed. They are very archivally stable, and the oldest of the methods listed. (Think Edward Weston and such).
venchka
Veteran
Visit the links for platinum/palladium samples
Visit the links for platinum/palladium samples
Texas Churches
Matthew Magruder
Enjoy!
Visit the links for platinum/palladium samples
Texas Churches
Matthew Magruder
Enjoy!
jano
Evil Bokeh
I looked beneath a rock, inside a box, pursuing like cancer,
but google didn't give me as concise an answer
as our over-educated friend, rogue designer!
but google didn't give me as concise an answer
as our over-educated friend, rogue designer!
venchka
Veteran
Aye
But the old guy
gave you pictures
worth 1,000 words
But the old guy
gave you pictures
worth 1,000 words
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