stomolophus
Member
Hi,
Hoping someone might be able to assist with a project I'm trying to sort out. I'm trying to make a silver gelatine emulsion using my own homemade gelatine produced from jellyfish. So I've made some gelatine from salted preserved jellyfish. I haven't bloom tested it or anything, and it is quite a weak gel, but it otherwise looks and functions appropriately.
Using this gelatine, I'm following this recipe to create an emulsion: https://www.filmlabs.org/technical-section/shooting/a-simple-home-made-emulsion-recipe/. The changes I have made have included doubling the amount of gelatine in an attempt to compensate for its low strength (or at least as much I can accurately do so, it is difficult to get all of the water out of the gel once it's made in a home kitchen). I am also adding 2g of chrome alum at the end to try to harden it a bit.
I have followed this recipe prior using photo grade gelatine with good results, which makes me think my issues have to do with the gelatine itself. Unfortunately I have almost zero understanding of the underlying chemistry, which is what I'm hoping someone here might be able to help me with.
Here are some photos for discussion:
These are initial contact print tests under an enlarger on watercolour paper with four coats of gelatine. The thin dark piece in the middle of the row is 3 minutes in Dektol under normal room lighting; the darker contact prints were exposed at around 10 minutes under the enlarger wide open.
I also attempted to make some dry plates. This is one coat, 10 minutes exposed under normal room light and contact printed.
That was my best result, with the ones after going weird and bitty.
And another. Something odd that is common across all of the ways of coating, how many coats, etc. is that they typically look great in the developer, but once they go into the fix, the whole image goes a bit funny and seems to sort of...wash out? I don't really know how to describe it. This happens with rapid fix as well as sodium thiosulfate.
So my main issues are the bittyness that seems to be happening if that makes sense, and the weird fixer washout. All of the chemistry except for a bit of the gelatine is mixed with distilled water, but I am washing in tap water at the end.
Does anyone have a sense of how to make this a bit more functional, or at least as much as possible given the gelatine isn't meant for this purpose?
Hoping someone might be able to assist with a project I'm trying to sort out. I'm trying to make a silver gelatine emulsion using my own homemade gelatine produced from jellyfish. So I've made some gelatine from salted preserved jellyfish. I haven't bloom tested it or anything, and it is quite a weak gel, but it otherwise looks and functions appropriately.

Using this gelatine, I'm following this recipe to create an emulsion: https://www.filmlabs.org/technical-section/shooting/a-simple-home-made-emulsion-recipe/. The changes I have made have included doubling the amount of gelatine in an attempt to compensate for its low strength (or at least as much I can accurately do so, it is difficult to get all of the water out of the gel once it's made in a home kitchen). I am also adding 2g of chrome alum at the end to try to harden it a bit.
I have followed this recipe prior using photo grade gelatine with good results, which makes me think my issues have to do with the gelatine itself. Unfortunately I have almost zero understanding of the underlying chemistry, which is what I'm hoping someone here might be able to help me with.
Here are some photos for discussion:

These are initial contact print tests under an enlarger on watercolour paper with four coats of gelatine. The thin dark piece in the middle of the row is 3 minutes in Dektol under normal room lighting; the darker contact prints were exposed at around 10 minutes under the enlarger wide open.

I also attempted to make some dry plates. This is one coat, 10 minutes exposed under normal room light and contact printed.

That was my best result, with the ones after going weird and bitty.

And another. Something odd that is common across all of the ways of coating, how many coats, etc. is that they typically look great in the developer, but once they go into the fix, the whole image goes a bit funny and seems to sort of...wash out? I don't really know how to describe it. This happens with rapid fix as well as sodium thiosulfate.
So my main issues are the bittyness that seems to be happening if that makes sense, and the weird fixer washout. All of the chemistry except for a bit of the gelatine is mixed with distilled water, but I am washing in tap water at the end.
Does anyone have a sense of how to make this a bit more functional, or at least as much as possible given the gelatine isn't meant for this purpose?