Tree Stands on Kozo

I just started printing the new tree stands work in platinum/palladium on thin handmade Japanese paper, and they are turning out better than I imagined (as soon as I got used to working on something with the texture and strength of wet kleenex). I have been wanting to make platinum prints on Kozo paper for a few years now due to the rich blacks and silk-like reflectance of the darker tones, but never felt like I had an appropriate reason or subject matter for it. I am working on more throughout the Spring and Summer, but here are a few from the printing session last week. ImageImage

Print of the Month—May

This month I am featuring another older image from an early to Europe—an abstraction from the Jardin des Tuileries, in Paris I made outside of the annual Paris Photo show held every November. 

Image

 

About the Editions:

Since most of the work I regularly show is project-based, there are hundreds of images in my files that are never seen, or that I never made a priority to print. Now that I have been scanning and making enlarged negatives for platinum/palladium printing, I have been returning to some of the older work, and, in many cases, printing negatives for the first time.

As a way to bring some of these images out into the light, I will feature a new print each month as a limited-edition platinum/palladium or non-editioned inkjet print at a greatly reduced price to make my work more accessible to friends, new collectors, and fine-art photography enthusiasts.

The platinum/palladium edition is limited to 10 signed and numbered 7.5″x7.5″ prints on 11″x13″ 100% cotton rag Revere Platinum, mounted and overmatted on 4-ply 16″x18″ Artcare Alpharag for a price of $200.

The inkjet edition is a signed 7.5″x.7.5″ print on 8.5″x11″ Canson Rag Photographique for a price of $25. I am now printing with custom-mixed Jon Cone Piezography quad-black inks, which allow for more subtle gradations and because they are pure pigments, without the use of additional color to form the image, are more archival.

If interested, please email me to arrange payment and shipping.

 

New Work—Tree Stands

I started photographing tree stands used during deer season on a few properties around Bucks County, PA a few autumns ago, and wanted to turn it into a larger series. I knew there was something in the idea to be explored but the photographs I was making were missing something. It wasn't until last week I finally sat up in a few different stands listening and watching the woods for a good while that I thought about how to approach it differently. Photographing from twenty feet up in the tree stands offers a much different view of the woods than we normally have as non-hunters, birds, or squirrels. Here are a few of test shots from earlier the week that I printed in platinum/palladium yesterday. I have been wanting to print on Japanese Kozo or Gampi papers for a while now and think this will finally be an appropriate subject.

Richard Boutwell, Tree Stand #2, 2012

Richard Boutwell, Tree Stand #85, 2012

Print of the Month—April

Between the trip to California and lots of other general busyness I haven't been able to put up a new Print of the Month until now. This month I am featuring an architectural detail of the Duomo in Milan from a visit back in 2008.

Duomo di Milano

About the Editions:

Since most of the work I regularly show is project-based, there are hundreds of images in my files that are never seen, or that I never made a priority to print. Now that I have been scanning and making enlarged negatives for platinum/palladium printing, I have been returning to some of the older work, and, in many cases, printing negatives for the first time.

As a way to bring some of these images out into the light, I will feature a new print each month as a limited-edition platinum/palladium or non-editioned inkjet print at a greatly reduced price to make my work more accessible to friends, new collectors, and fine-art photography enthusiasts.

The platinum/palladium edition is limited to 10 signed and numbered 7.5″x7.5″ prints on 11″x13″ 100% cotton rag Revere Platinum, mounted and overmatted on 4-ply 16″x18″ Artcare Alpharag for a price of $200.

The inkjet edition is a signed 7.5″x.7.5″ print on 8.5″x11″ Canson Rag Photographique for a price of $25. I am now printing with custom-mixed Jon Cone Piezography quad-black inks, which allow for more subtle gradations and because they are pure pigments, without the use of additional color to form the image, are more archival.

If interested, please email me to arrange payment and shipping.

Platinum/Palladium Printing with Fumed Silica

UPDATE 12/12/12: You can read more about platinum/palladium printing at my blog devoted to the subject at www.platinumprinting.wordpress.com/

When I started this blog I was reluctant to make too many posts on technical issues. However, for the past few weeks I have been testing a few different methods for making better platinum prints, as well as tests with the Jon Cone piezography inks for digital negatives—for both silver and platinum printing. I am planning on posting an extensive review of the Jon Cone "digital film" inkset in the near future.

If there were ever a lifelong quest of the platinum printer it would be in one in search of blacker-blacks. That is what led me first to double coating, experimenting with printing multiple separation negatives, and then waxing my platinum/palladium prints.  So when I read on Swings and Tilts, Bostic and Sullivan’s blog, about pre-coating the paper with fumed silica, I was compelled to try that as well.

Most of my testing the last few years has been less than scientific, and I generally trusted my eye, and comparisons of new test prints of certain images that have proven to yield exquisite print qualities across a variety of processes. However, for the fumed silica I wanted to know exactly how it affected contrast and exposure for my standard calibrated platinum/palladium workflow.*

The initial write-up on the Swings and Tilts says to use a foam paint roller to apply either the liquid or powdered form of fumed silica evenly to the paper, but the webstore only has a liquid in a 500ml bottle. I didn’t have a foam roller on hand to coat the liquid fumed silica so I used a 3-inch foam brush and a small tray with a few drops of solution. I dipped the brush in the tray to pick up the solution and quickly coated the entire sheet of paper. I try to keep the brushing to a minimum as to not damage the paper’s surface while still keeping as even coat as possible. Once the paper is coated it will start to curl, but will lay flat again after it dries for 5-10 minutes.

To actually test the effects of the Fumed Silica on print quality, I used a standard Stouffer calibrated 21-step tablet exposed through a sheet of Pictorico Premium OHP (I printed through the OHP because I was also testing against my standard printing time and testing the density range needed for inkjet negatives).

The results were somewhat surprising: the D-max increased as expected, but the separation in both the shadow and highlight values both increased. The paper seemed to be slightly faster as well, which contradicts the updated instructions on the Swings and Tilts blog.

The first two papers to test were Revere Platinum and Arches Platine, which was my preferred paper until about two years ago. The last two batches I received have been terrible—a rougher surface, lower D-max and problems with white specks all over the print. (I later learned in a conversation with Dana at Bostic and Sullivan that the Arches mill was bought up by another company and they fired the old guy who used to select the cotton and oversee production of Platine). The problem with the white specks is from small hairs sticking up off the paper’s surface. Dana suggested I try Tween 20 on the Arches, which solved some of the problems, but that Revere Platinum was a better paper all around. I am sitting with more than 25 full sheets of Platine and hoped the fumed silica would let me salvage the paper. In short, it didn’t.

The Platine seems to be worse with fumed silica than without. Without fumed silica the D-max is still low and the print has a muddy appearance in the darker tones. With the fumed silica the D-max did increase, but brushing it on seemed to have dislodged the paper fibers and spread them all over the coated area, resulting in very spotty prints. It is possible that rolling the fumed silica on dry will solve this problem, but it is still too much trouble to be a usable paper for me.

Fumed Silica Tests with Arches Platine

The Revere Platinum without the fumed silica does show an uneven coating and a specked surface as some people have reported on APUG and DPUG. The fumed silica seems to have evened out all the surface and spottiness problems. It needs more testing with larger final prints with large areas of smooth tone to be certain, but this preliminary test looks promising. Like the Arches Platine, the D-max increased and it seems to have increased the exposure scale as well. I checked the step wedge on a densitometer and graphed the curve in excel. I was surprised at how the curve was smoothed out with the fumed silica.

Fumed Silica Tests Revere Platinum

Fumed Silica Tests with Revere Platinum, 720dpi zoom

Revere Platinum Fumed Silica test_curves

*My standard coating mix is slightly different than the generally agreed upon ratio of sensitizer, metal salts, and restrainer. My system is based on four drops each of sensitizer and palladium to one drop of Tween 20 and one drop of NA2 at 2.5%–10%, depending on the image. My first coat is diluted with distilled water equal to the number of drops of sensitizer/palladium, keeping the Tween 20 and NA2 constant.

For a 4x5-inch print I use for a first coat a mixture of 2 drops each of Ferric Oxalate, and Palladium, 4 drops H2O, and 1 drop each of NA2 @ 2.5% and tween 20.

My second coat is 4 drops each of FO and PD, 1 drop of NA2 at the needed dilution, and 1 drop of Tween 20. When using the Jack Richeson “magic brush” you can get away with using fewer total drops, and while this is really too much solution for a 4x5-inch print, it scales up to an 8x10 print very well by only doubling the number of drops of each solution.

Print of the Month—December

This month's featured print is another from my 2004 trip to Iceland, made on the Skaftafellsjökull glacier, in what is now Vatnajökull National Park.

Skaftafellsjökull, Iceland, 2004

About the Editions:

Since most of the work I regularly show is project-based, there are hundreds of images in my files that are never seen, or that I never made a priority to print. Now that I have been scanning and making enlarged negatives for platinum/palladium printing, I have been returning to some of the older work, and, in many cases, printing negatives for the first time.

As a way to bring some of these images out into the light, I will feature a new print each month as a limited-edition platinum/palladium or non-editioned inkjet print at a greatly reduced price to make my work more accessible to friends, new collectors, and fine-art photography enthusiasts.

---

The platinum/palladium edition is limited to 10 signed and numbered 7.5″x7.5″ prints on 11″x13″ 100% cotton rag Arches Platine, mounted and overmatted on 4-ply 16″x18″ Artcare Alpharag for a price of $200.

The inkjet edition is a signed 7.5″x.7.5″ print on 8.5″x11″ Hahnemuhle PhotoRag Pearl, mounted and overmatted on 2-ply 13″x15″ Artcare Alpharag for $25.

If interested, please email me to arrange payment and shipping.

Print of the Month — November

Since most of the work I show is project-based, there are hundreds of images in my files that are never seen or that I never made a priority to print. So as a way to bring some of these images out into the light, each month I will be offering a new limited-edition platinum/palladium and uneditioned inkjet print at a greatly reduced price to make my work more accessible to friends, new collectors, and photography enthusiasts. This first "print of the month" image is one of several that I made in the lava fields around Landmannalauger during a trip to Iceland in 2004, where I camped and photographed around the countryside for seven weeks.

Lava Field, Landmannalauger, Iceland

The platinum/palladium edition is limited to 10 signed and numbered 7.5"x7.5" prints on 11"x13" Arches Platine and mounted and overmatted to 16"x18" for $200.

The inkjet edition is a signed 7.5"x.7.5" print on 8.5"x11" Hahnemuhle PhotoRag Pearl mounted and overmatted to 13"x15" inches for $25.

Purchases can be made through my Etsy shop or by contacting me through email for payment by check or Paypal.

PhotoReview Annual Benefit Auction

The PhotoReview's Annual Benefit Auction catalog is now online with over 250 photographs ranging from the mid 19th century to the present. Here is a link to an alphabetical list of photographers. I will be making my shopping(wish) list in the next few days.

Please take a look and bid generously to help support one of Philadelphia's best and longest standing photography resources.

Here is my contribution to this year's auction. It is from a new ongoing series of platinum/palladium prints I am making from older images that are not part of specifically defined projects.

Showing This Weekend During Philadelphia Open Studio Tours

POST I will be showing new work (and some from the archive) with a few other photographers at the Lightroom Salon Gallery in the Art Museum/Fairmount area of Philadelphia for POST. I didn't know if would be in Philadelphia for the tour when registration ended back in June so I do not have an individual artist page on the POST website, but here is a link to the gallery page.

Details: October 1st and 2nd from Noon to 6 at 2024 Wallace Street, 19130. Please call 215-609-5814 if you have any questions or need directions.

New platinum prints to be on view durring POST

Mojave Desert Artifacts in Philadelphia

I am part of Philadelphia's Light Room 1oth Annual group show opening today at the 3rd Sreet Gallery on 2nd Street. 10 years, 10 photographers. The reception is tonight and coincides with Philadelphia's Olde City First Friday openings.

Here is a list exhibiting photographers Glenn Bizewski Richard Boutwell MaryAnne Broderick-Pakenham Ronald Corbin Annarita Gentile Ranjoo Prasad Jesse Pryor Tom Sheeder Jr Harvey Stern Al Wachlin Jr

http://www.3rdstreetgallery.com/ 58 N 2nd St. Philadelphia Through August 28, 2011

Project Basho Fund-Raising Print Sale/Silent Auction

Don't miss out this Friday (Dec. 11) for what is sure to be one hell of a party and your chance to get to some great photographs at some incredible prices all while helping raise money for Philadephia's Project Basho and their ambitious plans for the new year. It all starts at 7PM at 1305 Germantown Ave. Philadelphia, PA.

In 2010 you can look forward to the expansion of their already diverse range of workshops, larger studio exhibition spaces and more frequent visiting artists and lectures. Take full advantage and become a member.

Aerial in Platinum

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The idea of combining the artistic controls of digital imaging with the inherent beauty of a historical process like platinum palladium has been both exciting and technically daunting. The best I have seen are prints made by the Salto Atelier in Belgium from five negatives up to one meter wide made on an image setter with a resolution of upwards of 10,000 dpi. The cost of equipment like that, or having Salto make the negatives for me, is prohibitively expensive, but I have been using their prints as a standard to work toward.

The practice of using inkjet printers to output the negatives has been around for some time (Dan Burkholder wrote the book more than ten years ago) but to me the quality has always left something to be desired. It is only in the last few years, with the progression in the quantity of inks and media, that inkjet negatives can, while they still don't stand up to negatives made in camera, yield truly exquisite prints.

New Aerial Photographs

I feel like I have been working non-stop the last few months and have a huge back log of negatives piling up. I'm really looking forward to spending a few weeks in the darkroom this summer getting all the new work printed. Thankfully I am able to get an idea of what I have done from quickly scanning the negatives. There is no substitute for having a contact sheet though. Here are a few from the first edit of four rolls of my aerial project I started when I was out West a few weeks ago. It was my first time photographing from a plane, and it was exponentially more difficult than I could have imagined. Outside of all the technical considerations, my real concern was being able to photograph knowing that there have been so many great aerial photographs made in the last 100 years. How can you photograph over the desert without thinking of Wlliam Garnett's or Emmet Gowin's or David Maisel's photographs. The only thing you can do is acknowledge them, and trust your vision.

Joshson Valley OHV Area
Johnson Valley OHV Area
Johnson Valley OHV Area
Johnson Valley OHV Area
Johnson Valley OHV Area

New Baby

Of the drum scanner sorts that is . . . We just bought an amazing Dainippon Screen SG 747 and I am flying out to California to early tomorrow to oversee the loading onto the truck and make sure nothing can possibly get damaged in transit. Screen 747

So, my dilemma: I will be there for 5 days. What cameras do I take, and where do I go? I will take the Hass; it goes everywhere with me. And I have an 8x10 on the West Coast but do I really want to bother packing holders and picking up some film? Thinking about making a trip up to the Owens Valley—make a few pictures, maybe do some fishing . . .

New Platinum Print

Ottsvile, PA 2009 I want to remember reading John Szarkowski saying something about Atget know when was best to photograph certain places—the time of year when the trees first start budding, but still allow the light to fully illuminate the scene. I am probably wrong about the direct quote, but that idea has always been in my mind.

Driving along back roads here you can still see deep into the woods but they have that chaotic energy that I have loved photographing the last few years. This is one of the first years I stopped long enough to set up the 8x10 and really push to see what could be made out of the jumbles of branches

The print is an 8x10-inch contact print in platinum/paladium. I have been trying to get the process to work with how I like my prints. Nice rich blacks with no blocking up in the subtle light and dark tones. Something not so easily done, but some negatives are worth the trouble. Making a contact print on Azo that would do all that in 1/10th of the time spent in the darkroom and with 1/10th of the expense, but there is something about the alchemy of platinum process that I love. The coating of the paper and watching it instantly appear in a flash in the developer. But it is the overall simplicity of the process—raw chemistry and light—that has made me keep going with it.