Angelino Sidewalk
Cyanotype Photogram of a fan palm leaf collected in Los Feliz, Los Angeles (2020).
The cyanotype is a fantastic 19th-century photographic printing process: it is quite simple, elegant, and magic (camera-less, no ink involved!). But, above all, it is always blue, deep blue.
PRODUCT
- Paper size: 32 x 24 inches (81,5 x 61 cm) = 4 pieces 8 x 24 inches (20,5 x 61 cm)
- Printed on 140 Ib. (300 gr.) acid-free 100% cotton watercolor paper
- Signed and dated
- Unique in that format
- Cyanotype sold unframed
- Every cyanotype will arrive carefully protected with acid-free unbuffered tissue and a cellophane archival bag and packaged in an extra-rigid fiberboard photo mailer envelope.
HOW I MAKE MY CYANNATYPES: 7 STEPS
- I walk. I collect. I document. The herbarium is the archive of my walks (and memories).
- I select the most exquisite quality watercolor paper (100% cotton, 140Ib/300gm).
- With a hake brush, I hand-coat the paper in the dark with a chemical formula that only involves two compounds: ferric ammonium citrate and potassium ferricyanide.
- The paper is dried in the dark and stored in a light-proof bag until its use.
- When it's sunny (in Los Angeles this is all year round!) I place the paper under a specimen from my herbarium and cover it with glass to avoid specimen displacements.
- The exposure takes a few minutes under the rays of the sun.
- Merely washing the exposed photogram turns the exposed areas into a vibrant Prussian blue and makes the cyanotype permanent.
WHAT MAKES CYANNATYPES SO UNIQUE
As long as the specimens are not broken (the loss of a small delicate part of a leaf or alga can occur while handling), the image can be repeated from one copy to the next.
However, the hand-coating and specimen placement are unique every time, creating a one-of-a-kind finished photogram. This results in slight variations to the photos shown, making each print unique. This is part of the beauty of cyanotypes!
ADVICE ON THE CARE OF CYANOTYPES
The cyanotype process is among the most permanent of all photographic processes. However, cyanotypes are sensitive to alkalinity, and they should be stored in chemically neutral and unbuffered materials. Of course, I provide the appropriate archival supplies with each shipment!
Exposure to direct light should be avoided to prevent the image from fading, as well as excessive dryness. However, "faded" cyanotypes will regenerate if stored in the dark in moist conditions.