Bene0Ph
Suspended / Banned
- Messages
- 3
- Edit My Images
- No
Hi everyone,
I hope I am posting this in the right place!
I am a first year student and I used the darkroom for the first time not long ago. I am working on a project on my own now and I am currently experimenting with fiber based, matte paper that I want to hand-tint.
I've already produced couple of images and they are ok, although I am not 100% happy cause they don't look really polished and the photographic paper looks pretty curly and wrinkly, even though I used a machine ( I am not sure about the name) which sort of dry and 'iron' the photo at the same time, but still they don't look really nice and ready.
Now, my tutor said that unfortunately there's no way a fiber based picture is going to be perfectly nice, polished and straight as digital prints. And that's ok, but I am quite sure that I could something else to make them look better. Any suggestions?
Also, I was looking at Hans-Peter Feldmann exhibition and more precisely at this serie: http://www.richardsaltoun.com/exhibitions/27/installation_shots/images153/. (They're also hand tinted images)
Now, I know that is a million dollar question but, how do you reckon he achieved that nice and polished look? I had to scan my images and reprint them digitally to make them look 'finished' but they sadly sort of lost that charm that fiber based paper has.
Cheers,
Benedetta
I hope I am posting this in the right place!
I am a first year student and I used the darkroom for the first time not long ago. I am working on a project on my own now and I am currently experimenting with fiber based, matte paper that I want to hand-tint.
I've already produced couple of images and they are ok, although I am not 100% happy cause they don't look really polished and the photographic paper looks pretty curly and wrinkly, even though I used a machine ( I am not sure about the name) which sort of dry and 'iron' the photo at the same time, but still they don't look really nice and ready.
Now, my tutor said that unfortunately there's no way a fiber based picture is going to be perfectly nice, polished and straight as digital prints. And that's ok, but I am quite sure that I could something else to make them look better. Any suggestions?
Also, I was looking at Hans-Peter Feldmann exhibition and more precisely at this serie: http://www.richardsaltoun.com/exhibitions/27/installation_shots/images153/. (They're also hand tinted images)
Now, I know that is a million dollar question but, how do you reckon he achieved that nice and polished look? I had to scan my images and reprint them digitally to make them look 'finished' but they sadly sort of lost that charm that fiber based paper has.
Cheers,
Benedetta
Last edited: