- Paper negative
The paper negative process consists of using a
negative printed onpaper (either photographically or digitally) to create the final print of aphotograph , as opposed to using a modern negative on afilm base ofcellulose acetate . The plastic acetate negative (which is what modern films produce) enable the printing of a very sharp image intended to be as close a representation of the actual subject as is possible. By using a negative based on paper instead, there is the possibility of creating a more ethereal image, simply by using a paper with a very visible grain, or by drawing on the paper, or distressing it in some way.One of the original forms of
photography was based on the paper negative process. Talbot's waxed-paper negative process, which was used to create his work "The Pencil of Nature ", used a negative created on paper treated withsilver salts, which was exposed in acamera obscura to create the negative and then contact printed on a similar paper to produce apositive image.When Talbot created this process it was intended to be a way to reproduce nature as accurately as possible (hence the name of his work, "The Pencil of Nature"). Through the years afterward, however, better and more accurate ways of producing exact replicas of nature were developed, and these processes relegated the paper negative process to obsolescence. Now that we have mega pixel
digital cameras sporting the finest ofZeiss lenses and super-fine-grainedemulsion films being used in state-of-the-artautofocus cameras, we have achieved the clarity and exactness of detail that Talbot and his contemporaries could only have dreamed of.The process of the paper negative is still relevant, though, in the realm of alternative-process photography. Photographers employing alternative processes reject the idea of the exact replica of nature and seek to use the inherent inexactness of antiquated processes to create a more personal and emotional image. The paper negative is an extremely versatile process that allows all manner of reworking and retouching of an image, and is the perfect medium to bridge the gap between
camera operator andartist .ee also
*
Contact printing
*Calotype References
*Enfield, Jill. "Photo-Imaging: A Complete Guide to Alternative Processes (Photography for All Levels: Advanced)"
*James, Christopher. "The Book of Alternative Photographic Processes"
*Webb, Randall and Martin Reed. "Alternative Photographic Processes: A Working Guide for Image Makers"External links
* [http://www.iphotocentral.com/showcase/showcase_descrp.php/9/1/0/0 Shadows and Light: The Paper Negative] A Short Essay on the Paper Negative and 28 Early Examples
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.