View Full Version : COuple of clarifying carbon questions questions
There were no bites on APUG for this question, maybe here
I have been doing a lot of reading lately about Carbon and was thinking about maybe trying it. But I have a few questions
Re: Squeegeeing the tissue
Is the tissue on a substrate to be strong enough to withstand being squeegeed or is the tissue strong enough on its own?
Bostic and Sullivan ready made tissue:
Is this an easy way to start?
Yes I plan on doing this with digital negs. One step at a time though.
sanking
05-29-2008, 01:47 PM
There were no bites on APUG for this question, maybe here
I have been doing a lot of reading lately about Carbon and was thinking about maybe trying it. But I have a few questions
Re: Squeegeeing the tissue
Is the tissue on a substrate to be strong enough to withstand being squeegeed or is the tissue strong enough on its own?
Bostic and Sullivan ready made tissue:
Is this an easy way to start?
Yes I plan on doing this with digital negs. One step at a time though.
Carbon tissue is something of a misnomer. It is actually a layer of pigmented gelatin on a fairly thick paper or plastic base. It should be able to withstand considerable pressure in squeegeing.
B&S tissue is definitely a good place to start. You may at some point want to learn to make your own tissue, but I would suggest staying with the manufactured material during the early learning phase.
Sandy King
Don Bryant
05-29-2008, 01:49 PM
There were no bites on APUG for this question, maybe here
I have been doing a lot of reading lately about Carbon and was thinking about maybe trying it. But I have a few questions
Re: Squeegeeing the tissue
Is the tissue on a substrate to be strong enough to withstand being squeegeed or is the tissue strong enough on its own?
Bostic and Sullivan ready made tissue:
Is this an easy way to start?
Yes I plan on doing this with digital negs. One step at a time though.
The substrate is plenty strong when a modern material like mylar or melinex is used.
The B&S tissue us a very easy way to learn the fundementals of carbon printing. Join the B&S carbon forum and Yak it up with those guys. They will be extremely helpful and enjoy answering questions. There are several good carbon printers who hang their hat there.
If possible intially start with in camera negatives, once you learn the process learn how to make digi negs with cheap processes like VDB and cyanotype and graduate to carbon.
I'm not a carbon printer but I have tried the B&S tissue. Carbon printing is something I keep meaning to back to. The process is fairly easy to learn but consistency can be more difficult.
Don
Thanks folks. Between you and vaughn on APUG it is clearing up.