Background
Analogue is a relatively new smartphone app that lets you experience shooting a large format camera right on your phone. It is a Black and White only app, shoots amazing photos and lets you apply darkroom edits like dodge, burn, crop, blur to your photos. It also generates beautiful negatives for every photo you take. Analogue is the first app where you truly get the analog feel, both with the camera and by using a real darkroom.
I am a huge alternative photography fan and a print fanatic. I love wet as well as contact prints - Cyanotypes, Van Dykes, Salts and have successfully and many times unsuccessfully wrestled with alternative printing techniques. Most of my contact prints are either from my 8x10 negatives and if shooting smaller formats, converted digital negatives that are printed on transparencies. For any serious work, however, I use specialized labs that do all the heavy lifting with the negatives, leaving me to concentrate on the printing. But I do print a lot of transparencies at home and am always looking for an easy way to do these.
The Genesis
I was for a long time looking to print my digital/iPhone photos in my darkroom but was missing an app that really did a good job with the negatives. More importantly a professional app that let me work with the contrast of the photos and somehow export/print the underlying negatives to a printer and print transparencies.
Fast forward a few months - ever since I got the Analogue app installed on my iPhone 6S as a beta tester, I had been dreaming of being able to print the digital negatives on transparencies - being able to load these in negative holders, darkroom enlarge and eventually wet print my photos.
I reached out to Marcus Carlsson the creator of Analogue (@miiamapps on twitter) and we talked about use cases and scenarios. I will not steal his thunder about specific details of several new features he incorporated to make printing digital negatives from Analogue app a reality - but suffice to say it is stunning.
I played with the beta version he rolled out a week back. My aim being simple -
- To take an iPhone photo,
- Import into Analogue
- Do darkroom edits in Analogue,
- Take that negative and print a transparency,
- Use that transparency in a enlarger
- Wet print a photo.
To summarize, the exercise was a great success. I loved the quality of printed transparency, and the darkroom workflow. Here are some photos I took during this process to help you experience what I saw each step of the way.
The Workflow
Not going into too much specifics, the new digital negative feature inside Analogue does let you select a photo inside Analogue, do edits, saves those edits back to the negative, allows you to resize based on what format you want to work with in the actual darkroom.
The letter sized transparency with a 4x5 size negative printed |
Materials I Used
- I used for my tests a standard Staples Overhead Transparency Acetate.
- It has a paper strip that fools some printers into believing paper is being fed. You can peel it after printing.
- I used my HP Envy 5660 inkjet printer. You should be able to use any home office printer I would assume.
- For transparencies just make sure you print on the rough/coarse side which is designed for absorbing the ink.
- As seen above, I experimented with the 4x5 size just to be able to handle it better and compare sizes.
Durst Pro Enlarger |
The transparency cut to size |
The transparency inside the Durst holder |
Projecting the transparency on enlarger easel |
Close up of the projected transparency |
Here was the outcome
8 comments:
Helpful post. Thanks. Recently tried home printed transparency digital negatives for the first time. Used my cardboard pinhole camera to shoot a 4x5 paper negative. Scanned that then divided the image in to nine 2 1/4" squares in Photoshop (no other manipulation). Printed those nine on one sheet of 8 1/2" square Inkpress transparency (on a low-end Epson, set at "plain paper", "photo", contrast -25). Then cut those in to strips and placed each negative in a 2 1/4" holder. Printed each on 8x10 Kentmere multigrade and trimmed them to 8x8. Used photo corners to mount each square to re-make the original image in a 32" square frame (with 2 1/4" outside borders, just for referential kicks). The "digital grain" was curious and I'll try it again in a series, increasing contrast and maybe "draft" print to get more of the oval grain shapes.
Great work and thank you for sharing your photo on twitter Sandy. Here is the link for others - https://twitter.com/sandy_mclennan/status/709206083202629632
Only inkjets will work? No toner cartridges?
Jerry - The app just uses the underlying iOS to trigger a print. It does not mandate what printer/toner you use. I have not tried printing with other options. Will be something to experiment with.
Have you tried using the phone itself in the place of the negative carrier, projecting the negative image onto photographic paper (as with the app Enfojer)?
The business advertise has changed rapidly finished the previous couple of years, so you have to consider a few things to expand deals at your organization in the midst of the merciless rivalry of different organizations.Cheap Real Estate Postcard Marketing
at the same time as we embrace all of this variation that digital has delivered and discover the brand new depths of technology, I suppose it’s important to maintain one foot inside the “analog” world, at the least one region – the bodilyprint. The print versus virtual discussion is a completely controversial topic among professional photographers, and clearlyall of us could have their personal opinion. regardless of where you fall in this remember, I’d want to proportion a few mindand explain why I sense prints be counted for us as photographers and for our customers as purchasers of images. cheap postcard printing
I haven’t checked in here for some time because I thought it was getting boring, but the last few posts are really good quality so I guess I’ll add you back to my daily bloglist. You deserve it my friend. insurance guides esigns vinyl banners printing
Post a Comment