Sidewalk Electrophotography Portraits
Hey y’all. Last weekend we set up the old Xerox Camera No. 4 on our mini deck out front.
Mabel then invited people to sign up for 15-minute time slots to come stand for a socially-distanced portrait session.
I was missing many of our friends in Catskill, so I knew that having them over was going to be fun.
I also knew that I was going to share JPGs of the portraits gratis, no matter what. But what to do with the prints?
Early that morning, Mabel and decided to offer the prints as a gift if someone wanted to donate $50 to the Catskill Mutual Aid group. Mabel volunteers with them and works on the micro-farm and sanitizers projects (just to name two…).
That buoyed our feelings–I felt great that the art would contribute to good local cause.
I was happy to see that the scheduling worked out well. We spaced out the appointments so that people wouldn’t gather (gotta keep us all safe!).
So.. on to the art and process! read more about Electrophotography here.
Turns out the toner I purchased has an opposite charge.
What’s that mean? Well for the layperson, every image that day came out as a “negative”. Meaning light areas were dark and vice versa. Sometimes interesting, but somewhat vexing when I was expecting to deliver portraits that looked normal :-)
All the images you see here were photographed with a 150mm Irirx Macro lens on an art production setup in my studio, then reversed in Lightroom and lightly edited.
We’ll have it sorted and have the right polarity on our toner next time.
But the process is fun. And signups were rapid, so we expanded the session from two hours to four and-a-half.
Here are some of the results.
Want to be part of the next Pop-In Sidewalk Portraits? Great. Be sure to sign up for my mailing list here.
More about the Catskill Mutual Aid group:
Read more, join up or donate:
catskillmutualaid.org
In the meantime, I look forward to doing more (analog!) manipulation of the images prior to fusing. That means brushing, smudging and zapping the loose carbon on the paper’s surface before melting it with heat.
Cool, right?
Until next time… (air) hugs.