Negatives
Prints
Photo History
Etiquette
Experiments
100
Three methods of creating a 4x5 inch negative for contact printing.
What is cliche-verre (glass negative or vellum drawing), 4x5 sheet film in a pinhole camera, digital negative (will also accept pinhole print on RC paper or photogram)
100
The negative contact printing process and the original architectural blueprint invented by Sir John Herschel in 1842 that prints excellent detail.
What is a cyanotype.
100
The year was photography invented.
What is 1839
100
You should treat both of these with RESPECT.
What is chemistry & each other.
100
The "inventor" of the Chlorophyll print process.
Who is Binh Danh
200
In a cyanotype, everything that is white on your negative will be this color on the print.
What is blue.
200
A negative contact printing process which combines silver nitrate and a gelatin salt mixture to create prints with a reddish brown hue.
What is salt prints.
200
The inventor of the Salt Print Process.
Who is William Henry Fox Talbot.
200
You should do this for 15 seconds before moving a print from one chemical to another in the darkroom.
What is drain your prints.
200
Three fruits and vegetables that worked well (from what we can tell so far) in the anthotype process.
What is beets, blackberries, blueberries, wine, &c.
300
The lighting that you develop sheet film in.
What is complete darkness.
300
Unlike cyanotypes and salt prints which use a negative, anthotypes and chlorophyll prints are a this type of process.
What is a positive printing process.
300
The English woman photographer who created a famous series of cyanotype photograms of botanical and marine life.
Who is Anna Atkins.
300
Before turning on the lights in the darkroom, you should do this.
What is ask if there is any light sensitive material out in the open.
300
You can use this instead of using the salt and distilled water in the salt printing process.
What is ocean water.
400
Platinum palladium, anthotype, chlorophyll prints, salt prints, and cyanotypes are all contact printing processes, so your negative is this size.
What is the same size as your print.
400
You should coat your paper with this to "size it" prior to coating for a cyanotype.
What is arrowroot starch.
400
He is famous for his camera obscura images in hotel rooms all over the world. He also pioneered the use of prisms to create pinhole images that are "right-side up".
Who is Abelardo Morrell.
400
What should you do before and after using a tray in the darkroom.
What is wash/rinse it.
400
This is sometimes disappointing with Alternative Processes and sometimes a happy accident.
What is mistakes or imperfections.
500
How you make a positive from a negative print.
What is sandwich them face to face under glass with the unexposed paper on the bottom, make a test strip, then make a print of the correct exposure. (invented by Fox Talbot.)
500
Sabattier-Effect (aka Solarization).
What is exposing your print to light while in the development process. The effect is enhanced by using "Solarol" developer.
500
Camera Obscuras have been used by artists since this century.
What is the 16th century (1500s).
500
You should leave the darkroom as clean as it was when you got there, OR ________.
What is CLEANER.
500
This is a method of getting double exposures with a pinhole camera.
What is multiple pinholes in a pinhole camera. (would also accept two exposures on the same piece of paper or film.)