chandrastudios
Member
how do you guys do your solarization ?
Do you mean the Sabattier effect (partial image reversal)?
I use a special film, Kodak Spectrum Analysis film 5367, no.1 expired 4/1981. The film is only sensitive to UV and blue light. This was a 4 second exposure at f/4.5. It has been reversed like you normally would with a negative but you can see where the bright sky and some of the glass has become solarized from overexposure. This film is extremely slow, less than 1 ISO.
Volunteer Park Conservatory by Bryan Chernick, on Flickr
This was a long exposure for 1 minute at f/2.8. It is a positive image on the film due to solarization from overexposure.
Sammamish River at Waynes by Bryan Chernick, on Flickr
This was a 2 second exposure at f/2.8 of the same scene. It has been reversed like you would with a negative. You can see where the bright sky has become solarized but the rest of the scene has not.
Sammamish River at Waynes by Bryan Chernick, on Flickr
I tried overexposing HP5+ to get solarization but even at very long exposures of 4 min. at f2 under full sun I could not get the reversal effect. The density just kept increasing until it reached a plateau.
the idea of achieving the effect of solarization through film is new to me because the only way i have approached the technique is by flashing light for a fraction of a second before fixing the image.
Your experience is with the Sabattier effect. It is most commonly done with prints in the developer tray. Bob Carnie did a series where he used the Sabattier effect on large format negatives. But most of us just play with the prints.
True Solarization, is an effect of film characteristics where there is a pattern of increasing density in response to light until you reach a certain threshold. As you start to give gross overexposure beyond that threshold density starts to change direction (reversal) and goes down in response to greater amounts of light until yet again it starts to go up. It goes in a cycle up and down as you continue to increase exposure.
That's why @BAC1967 's pictures are so interesting. That's true solarization.
i don't really understand this but thanks...to simply understand, i need to overexpose my shots, that i understood. what would the development process be like? just normal ? and does it have to be a specific kind of film? or any black and white film will do ?
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