You're unhinged I love it
martine
Curled whiskers to match the curled feet, 10/10 no notes
Sneezing directly into your cat's face is a nice role reversal
Yep. I keep mine in a teeny jar that used to hold watch parts. It's my whisker jar.
Yessss ya freak! How many cats do you have and how long have you had them? That's a hefty collection!
Hi Sadie, I love your ear whiskers
I love when they're interested in something and the lil whiskers perk forward :')
Oliver is a dramatic boy and has dramatic whiskers. The longest whisker I've ever found from him was 5 1/4" long. I collect them, obviously.
And here is a twitchy whisker video.
Ferric ammonium citrate and potassium ferricyanide. Don't bathe in it but I've never had any irritation from splashes on my skin that I wash off, or from rinsing with no gloves (the final rinse is in plain water). Don't mix it with a lot of acid (not sure why you would) because then it makes cyanide gas, but in the process of making cyanotypes, very very safe!
I've never used enlargers for this process. They're exposed with UV light so you'd have to use a UV bulb with it and from my brief Google, there's varying success. When I do photos, I print the negatives full size on transparency film and expose in the sun.
Hell yeah! It's an alternative photography process. You mix up a chemical emulsion and paint it on some watercolor paper (or fabric or wood or anything porous). Then you can arrange a composition on the paper with stuff like plants (what we focus on for this class) but other stuff like have or loose knit fabrics, objects with neat shapes, whatever. You can also take photos or do digital design and print out negatives on transparencies.
Once you're ready to go, you expose them in the sun! There's a lot of different factors in how long you expose them forβtime of day, time of year, cloud cover, the thickness of your design materials, the pH of your paper or fabric, and a bunch of other stuff I know I haven't learned about yet. In my class we watch everyone's prints and I explain the different phases you can see them go through. I talk about what changes I'm looking for and factors I'm considering. I'll tell each person when I think theirs is done and what has led me to that decision. It gets easier with practice, but I always tell people it's a great art form for "recovering perfectionists" because I'm always learning something new.
Once they're exposed, you just rinse in a plain water bath and you get that awesome blue. This was about 20 minutes after rinsing, but they continue to get deeper in color over the next day or so as the pigments oxidize.
The chemicals used in cyanotype are very safe! Safer than traditional photo development, even B&W. I never wear gloves, even.
You can get started with minimal knowledgeβall you really need to read is the directions on the back of the bottle. To lean the intricacies obviously takes a lot longer, mostly just experience and practice. Beyond the basics, when I have a question I'll Google. Picked up some cool tidbits on Reddit. But mostly I just experiment!
I have mine on a little knickknack shelf, but I affixed it with poster tack because I'm afraid of the same π