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Alternative process

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

An alternative process is a non-traditional or non-commercial photographic printing process. Currently, the standard analog photographic printing process for black-and-white photographs is the gelatin silver process.[1] Standard digital processes include the pigment print, and digital laser exposures on traditional color photographic paper.[citation needed]

Alternative processes often overlap with historical, or non-silver processes. Most of these processes were invented over 100 years ago and were used by early photographers.[2][3]

Many contemporary photographers are revisiting alternative processes and applying new technologies (the digital negative) and practices to these techniques.

Examples

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  • Anthotype – Image created using photosensitive material from plants
  • Caffenol – Alternative photographic film development process
  • Chrysotype – Photographic process invented by John Herschel
  • Daguerreotype – Early photographic technique
  • Gum bichromate and other Pigmented Dichromated Colloids which are used to directly generate a photographic print
  • Platinum Process and Palladium Process
  • Carbon print and various similar processes which use a non-sensitive intermediate layer to generate a photographic image
  • Van Dyke Brown, Cyanotype and various other iron-based processes
  • Wet and Dry Plate processes based in silver using a hand coated emulsion on a tin or aluminum (tintype) or glass (ambrotype) base
  • Resinotype and several similar processes which rely upon unexposed dichromated colloids to accept an insoluble pigment
  • Inkodye, a light-oxidized vat dye.
  • Oil pigment processes, such as bromoil process
  • Other processes which use silver halide but in various different ways other than the typical silver-gelatin formula, such as Salt Print
  • Any number of processes which use more exotic materials, such as uranium chloride, gold chloride, and any number of other salts to directly or indirectly generate a photographic print
  • Non standard digital manipulation or printing.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "An Introduction to Photographic Processes". The New York Public Library. Retrieved 2023-08-17.
  2. ^ "ARTZ 388.01: Alternative Process Photography". scholarworks.umt.edu.
  3. ^ "Alternative Process Photography: Beyond Digital and Film". digitalcommons.uri.edu.
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