Thanks, Mike! I am unaware of a way to process the paper. It is so severely over exposed that it would go completely black with normal chemical processing. If somebody knows of a way to preserve the prints I would love to know the secret.
@@adehanft I have no idea, but I wonder if very dilute developer for a very short time then blix? I guess you could also change during exposure, by using ND filters or something to reduce the exposure. So difficult to know especially with such a long process, it's not like you can do a whole load of tests! But maybe you're just fine doing what you're doing!
Some pretty cool pinhole camera shots!
Hello, nice video! What kind of paper did you use? Ilford 3 RC?
That year-long image is amazing! You don't develop the paper? What would happen if you did?
Thanks, Mike! I am unaware of a way to process the paper. It is so severely over exposed that it would go completely black with normal chemical processing. If somebody knows of a way to preserve the prints I would love to know the secret.
@@adehanft I have no idea, but I wonder if very dilute developer for a very short time then blix? I guess you could also change during exposure, by using ND filters or something to reduce the exposure. So difficult to know especially with such a long process, it's not like you can do a whole load of tests! But maybe you're just fine doing what you're doing!