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The photographic news
- Bandzählung
- 7.1863
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- 1863
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- Hochschule für Grafik und Buchkunst Leipzig
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- Hochschule für Grafik und Buchkunst Leipzig
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- Bandzählung
- No. 256, July 31, 1863
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Zeitschrift
The photographic news
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Band 7.1863
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- Register Index 619
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Band
Band 7.1863
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the photographic news. Vol. VII. No. 256.—July 31, 1863. CONTENTS. inary in points of The pro- negatives, one very soft and thin, and the other very dense. The light was one of the worst we have had this summer, misty and yellow, onl This of course i prints we have just tried is upon it, and shows a conside- print, and will, pro- rable improvement upon the former print, bably, leave little to desire. Nevertheless, PHOTOGRAPHS IN PRINTING INK. Tub production of a photograph direct from the negative, in the very material which has always been regarded as the type of permanency and pictorial stability—printing ink, is unquestionably a master stroke of ingenuity. This has been the result desiderated from the time that silver prints have been found to fade. As carbon process after carbon process has been tried with more or less of success, as one method How, only one degree removed from a fog. interfered with the certainty of our operations, and materially prolonged the exposure. Nevertheless we obtained two good prints. The time of exposure usually required in sunlight with an ordinary good negative, Mr. Pouncy informed us, is about twenty minutes or half an hour. On this occasion wo exposed for about two hours ; possibly a quarter of an hour longer, in the bad light we had, might have been an advantage. In the point of weakness, common to most carbon pro cesses, these prints are faultless. Tha —dat: c • detail, as to the exact material and tint desirable for different subjects, it is probable that enlarged experience will bring improvements. Now as to the process. In another column we publish the specification of the patent ; but it may, nevertheless, be interesting to give a brief summary of the manipulations, and the principle upon which they arc based, here. It is somewhat singular that upon two of the oldest facts in photography this process is founded : upon the fact that bitumen of Judaea becomes insoluble in its ordinary solvents when exposed to the action of light—a fact known to Niepce as early as 1827, if not earlier to some of our own savans ; and upon the fact that bichromates, in combination with organic matter, become insoluble under the action of light, a fact discovered by Mr. Mongo Ponton, in 1838. Almost every carbon process and method of photo-lithography and photo-engraving yet propounded has been based upon one or the other of the facts we have just mentioned. The merit of Mr. Pouncy’s process consists in the novel and ingenious application of known facts, and in further development of these facts. The properties of bichromates and of bitumen of Juda were known, but it was not known that these substances might be so incorporated, or combined, with ordinary printing ink that it should become insoluble ( after exposure to light. This is what he discovers. In many respects his new carbon process resembles others. He takes lamp-black or other carbonaceous pigment—a fatty matter, such as tallow and turpentine—the materials composing printing ink ; to these he adds bitumen of or both ; these materials arc .2, 5 PAGE Correspondence—Foreign Science—Does Light only Exist in the Eye—Successful Lime Toning 369 Photographic Notes and Queries—Angle of View, &c.—Ebonite Baths 371 Talk in the Studio 371 To Correspondents 372 Photographs Registered during the past Week 372 after another has been suggested for securing permanency in silver prints, it has been the repeated ejaculation, “ If we could only get photographs in printers’ ink, in the material which gives durability to printed books and engravings ! ” Mr. Pouncy has solved this problem. Whatever may have been the merits or demerits of his former processes and his former claims, we arc bound to state that his present process, just protected by Her Majesty’s royal letters patent, is as beautiful and simple as it is ingenious. The term “ photograph in printing ink ” is at first sight suggestive of a photo-engraving or a photo-lithograph. But let the term be distinctly understood : by the process to which we refer, a print is produced direct from the negative in printing ink, just exactly as a print, by the ordinary method of printing, is produced in silver. This process does not in any way clash with photo-lithography or photo engraving, although it may possibly be found a valuable adjunct to both, as a method of getting the image on the stone or plate. At present they are valuable for the rapid reproduction in large numbers of all subjects which can be The material used is, as we have said, printing ink, and the colour of the print is, therefore, gradations of black. Now when these gradations arc formed by stippling or hatching, giving a perfect black and perfect white in small points, or fine lines side by side, a variety of agreeable tones of pure grey are produced, varying in depth of tint according to the state of subdivision of the points or lines and spaces. But when the gradation is produced, as we have it here, by gradations of depth in continuous tints of black printing ink like a wash in water-colour painting, the greys appear to have a very slight greenish brown or olive tinge, ■which we scarcely like. This, it will readily be seen, is, however, a matter entirely under control, the exact colour of the ink being a matter in the hands of the operator, a warmer tint being easily obtainable. Another difficulty which has existed, Mr. Pouncy is just surmounting. We described one of these prints we received some months ago ; and wo then said that something more was desirable in the purity of the lights or whites. Mr. Pouncy informed us at the time that this was a matter chiefly depending on the quality of the paper. A sample of paper he has recently obtained will, he believes, entirely remedy this difficulty. One of the represented in the conventional gradation of stipple or hatching. Even if half-tone be eventually satisfactorily secured in negatives of all classes, from nature, they will not be put on the stone or plate for production by the printing press, except when large numbers are required. But in Mr. Pouncy’s new process he aims at superseding the use of silver for single prints, whether the subject be portrait, landscape, or reproduction. We have, just before writing these remarks, exposed and developed, in conjunction with Mr. Pouncy, two portrait PAGE Photographs in Printing Ink 361 Photo-Engraving 30 The Dimiculties of Lime Toning. By Jabez Hughes 31 Photographic Chemicals 302 Critical Notices 302 Spectra of the Stars 300 Mr. Pouncey's New Patent Process for Permanent Printing 307 Doings of the Sunbeam 368 negative appears to be accurately registered. $ — D . . can see at present, the colour or tone of the prints is the Judaea, or bichromate of potash, G. .U , . ... chief point in regard to which we should desire modification. I ground together, and thoroughly incorporated.
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