Cyanotypes
Cyanotype photography was developed by John Hershel in 1840 and it was the first non-silver technology to create photographs. It did not become famous before Anna Atkins, a British scientist, started publishing books with cyanotypes of ferns in 1841.
While usually cyanotypes are created by mixing two chemicals with water before mixing the solutions in equal parts and soaking some cotton rich paper with it, which then - once it is dried - is exposed to UV light to create the photograph, the cyanotypes here are created digitally from color RAW files which I developed in Lightroom and converted into Cyanotypes in Silver Efex Pro.
Read MoreWhile usually cyanotypes are created by mixing two chemicals with water before mixing the solutions in equal parts and soaking some cotton rich paper with it, which then - once it is dried - is exposed to UV light to create the photograph, the cyanotypes here are created digitally from color RAW files which I developed in Lightroom and converted into Cyanotypes in Silver Efex Pro.
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Bridge crossing the Fossá with Bæjatindur in the background
Pentax K-3 • ¹⁄₁₅ sec • ƒ / 16 • 90 mm • ISO 100 • SIGMA 18-300mm F3.5-6.3 DC MACRO OS HSM C014 Fossardalur,Djúpivogur,Austurland,Island Converted to Cyanotype in Silver Efex Pro with a Complete dynamic hard (15) preset, Cyanotype 11 coloring and a Kodak 100 TMAX PRO filmemulation uuid="879DED3F-8639-49E6-A299-317DBE524887" id="Iceland lilleulven.com _K3_6320-Bearbeitet.tif " uuid="E99848FD-9713-45AA-866B-36F1CAC474F3" id="Island lilleulven.com _K3_6320-Bearbeitet-Bearbeitet.tif "
DjúpivogurEastEuropeHerbstISISLIcelandautumnblack and white photographybridgecloudscyanotypeenvironmentfallgenrelandscapemountainousnature photographyseasonskystreet
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