Making a Tintype

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  • Опубліковано 28 сер 2024
  • Process Historian Mark Osterman demonstrates the making of a Civil War-era tintype.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 75

  • @jan3019
    @jan3019 11 років тому +11

    amazing!! i love the long processing, this video is making me love old school photography more!! thanks for sharing!!

  • @outremer91
    @outremer91 2 роки тому +2

    Thank you for this. I came here after scrolling through all of Abraham Lincoln's photos and was amazed at the level of detail and resolution they were able to capture in the 19th century.

  • @Peace-qm2sp
    @Peace-qm2sp 4 роки тому +2

    The art of writing with light, beautiful

  • @Doud92
    @Doud92 11 років тому +9

    This is photography.. Beautiful

  • @JWheeler331
    @JWheeler331 5 років тому +6

    I still rather enjoy this video every time I come across it. I would love to take a workshop there.

  • @elwyncrawford3684
    @elwyncrawford3684 11 років тому +5

    Old time magic! Wonderful video. Thank you ...

  • @TheLisaGate
    @TheLisaGate 2 роки тому +1

    I’ve collected a couple hundred tintypes over the years. This was a fantastic video! I loved seeing the process.

  • @Rstars11
    @Rstars11 5 років тому +12

    "Now let's do a selfie together!"

  • @fredphoto5551
    @fredphoto5551 2 роки тому +1

    Still magic !

  • @Trundlebedtales
    @Trundlebedtales 12 років тому +2

    This is absolutely wonderful to share. I so want a tintype made of me. It's one of my life goals.

  • @robertgoidel4014
    @robertgoidel4014 11 років тому +7

    I noticed that the image is made into a positive. How is the reversal method achieved? Are you familiar with the later paper ferrotype of photography achieved at State Fairs or Carnivals from the 1950's to the early 1960's? Always wondered about the chemistry involved. Great Video! Thank you!

  • @floridaironclad
    @floridaironclad Рік тому

    Awesome banjo picking. This video will help me shoot better photos, thanks

  • @sgsan705
    @sgsan705 3 роки тому +1

    I thought he went to develop the photo after @0.45 and realised only later that he was just getting started.

  • @flecktarn1000
    @flecktarn1000 12 років тому

    im glad to see people doing this....this is super cool

  • @ShaddySoldier
    @ShaddySoldier 5 років тому

    Makes such a clean and crisp photo that digital and film can't capture. The other two are good in their own rights but tin types have that special something to em

  • @jlimarquez
    @jlimarquez 13 років тому

    Mark is a referent in a wet plate world, He makes easy a complicated process.
    Thanks for the video is very "clear".

  • @MigdalBaval
    @MigdalBaval 12 років тому

    @drhtcl No - he is carnishing the plate. This is to protect the delicate collodion surface on he plate to make the image last longer. Otherwise, it would get all nasty and scratched up as time went by. Another upside is that the varnish contains oil of lavender, so it smells lovely =)

  • @new_comment
    @new_comment Рік тому

    That is so awesome!

  • @namu1957
    @namu1957 Рік тому

    This was so neat.

  • @ambrotype
    @ambrotype 13 років тому +1

    Mark Osterman is truly the modern master of the wet plate process
    as well as many historic processes.

  • @davestelling
    @davestelling Рік тому

    Wonderful!

  • @MrFritz136
    @MrFritz136 13 років тому

    Mark, what a nice clean image. I'd like to see more from other tintypists. There are so many smoky images from practitioners. I'm blessed to have had such fine teachers like Sabo and Dunniway. Kind of spoils one after that. Always appreciated your's and Francis's as well. - Fritz Kirsch

  • @RogersPhotographyGuilford
    @RogersPhotographyGuilford 4 роки тому

    1:52 yes I always use that method to hold up the "stiffs" I photograph (levity: yes I know the technique so don't even bother...). Stunning work!

  • @attilarivera
    @attilarivera 4 роки тому

    Beautiful!

  • @zoeymelf
    @zoeymelf 12 років тому +1

    Some random answers to questions people have posed below.... @dodphoto, you can purchase the chemistry from Bostick and Sullivan , @ flashmx Wood holders should last quite some time, the material that people use is called trophy plate aluminum, @picaticatara. Tintype images can last over a hundred years.. @ georgeeastmanhouse. Thanks for posting this video! You guys make it look so easy!

  • @darthsidious9883
    @darthsidious9883 11 років тому +2

    hahaha i poured silver all over my hand the first time i took one of these photos. i assist.. at least to my best capabilities a tin type photographer who i adore. his equipment is amazing! i would love to eventually have my own camera but failed to realize the massive investment this trae takes. especially to the History junkies that like doing everything in complete period conditions.

  • @jin9311
    @jin9311 4 роки тому +1

    Hello I am a subscriber to South Korea.
    There is no information about collodion wet plate in South Korea. So I want to ask you some questions.
    I am using a poeboy collodion (Cadmium bromide is not available in South Korea )
    The picture is still blurry or the contrast is poor. I'm not sure if it's a silver nitrate issue or a developer issue. Collodion was definitely well made. The developer made it well by adding iron sulfate, acetic acid and ethanol. But the picture is blurry. I am doing an ambro type. Is it a problem with silver nitrate? Specific gravity is exactly 1.07. If the pH of silver nitrate is about 5~6, can the picture be blurry or the contrast is weak?

    • @GeorgeEastmanMuseum
      @GeorgeEastmanMuseum  4 роки тому

      Reach out to the workshops team at workshops@eastman.org, and they can help with your questions!

  • @Chiaroscuro1991
    @Chiaroscuro1991 11 років тому +1

    No problem with the spirit lamp in this application. Fumes from actually doing the process are not strong enough to cause a fire. Ever go by an oil refinery and notice the pipe with an open flame. Now, if a stock bottle of ether were to be broken, that's a different story. But, if that happened..we wouldn't be varnishing plates. :-)

  • @tubelator
    @tubelator 5 років тому +1

    But i was thinking. If you make 3x the same tintype, everytime with a colored filter in front of the lens. Red/Bleu/Green and you merge them in photoshop, you will get a color image right?

    • @alexmajakovski8753
      @alexmajakovski8753 3 роки тому +1

      Even if you use different color filters, the white layer the image is projected on is only sensitive to some wavelengths of light. Thats why he can take it out under the red light, the material doesn't react to red at all. The panchromatic film for all wavelengths of light came about in the 1920s

  • @pigmentedkat
    @pigmentedkat 4 роки тому

    Thank you! That's so useful :)

  • @morriganaensland3842
    @morriganaensland3842 5 років тому

    This is beautiful, Saludos desde México

  • @robertcaffrey6097
    @robertcaffrey6097 3 роки тому

    In a word Magic.

  • @NobiDora
    @NobiDora 6 років тому +2

    Leader Portrait

  • @alekseishevchenko4318
    @alekseishevchenko4318 7 років тому

    Tell the beginner why after drying of the developed plate the layer of collodion takes milk color? And if I wet the plate again, then everything will turn right until it dries. Thanks! =)
    P.S. At the moment, the plate did not cover with varnish.

  • @kruphoto
    @kruphoto 12 років тому

    awesome video! way to keep the origins of photography from vanishing. I wish I had access to a dark room.

  • @anytownUSA
    @anytownUSA 12 років тому

    outstanding video... thanks

  • @zoot21suit
    @zoot21suit 10 років тому

    That was pretty good.

  • @h2ofrogman
    @h2ofrogman 9 років тому +2

    Love the frame. Where can you get them?

  • @caiodlimaM
    @caiodlimaM 9 місяців тому

    i really want to know how to do it

  • @JanKratochvilcom
    @JanKratochvilcom 12 років тому +1

    Thank you very much. Greatly captured movie. I will start to make my first WP images soon. I have a work shop behind me and I prepare to make my own film holder for my "new" Kodak 2D 8x10. I would like to make the plate holder from a wood. How strong will the collodium mixture affect the wood? Will such a plate holder survive at least one year or more? I assume to take about 20 images monthly. How thin should be the tin for tin type, 2mm? Thank you again.

  • @MigdalBaval
    @MigdalBaval 12 років тому +1

    Pardon if this is a silly question - but where does one get frames like that?

  • @sherlock9842
    @sherlock9842 7 років тому +3

    the music heard melodious, how to search that kind of music

  • @DanielleDeutschTV
    @DanielleDeutschTV 12 років тому

    A well ventilated bathroom works too.

  • @rowdyman22
    @rowdyman22 13 років тому +1

    I just was going threw some of my grandpa's old stuff and found like 30 of these style photo's, what would the best way to date them? and or figuring out who these people are?

    • @JohnnyReb
      @JohnnyReb 4 роки тому +1

      I know it's very late but if you're still trying to date those photos the best way is by clothing or the mat style.

  • @ejmphotodotcom
    @ejmphotodotcom 4 роки тому +1

    without gloves!

    • @Chiaroscuro1991
      @Chiaroscuro1991 Рік тому

      Wanted to show how it was actually done … including without gloves.

  • @halogenburn
    @halogenburn 12 років тому +8

    No gloves?

    • @Matta212121
      @Matta212121 7 років тому +2

      hes pro dw

    • @ganzonomy
      @ganzonomy 6 років тому

      That's what I was wondering. Even with gloves, I wound up getting hives to the point I had to stop doing my own developing.

    • @JWheeler331
      @JWheeler331 5 років тому

      I use glove sometimes but many times I don't. Esp when working outside in the extreme southern heat. The gloves fill with sweat and run out if not careful.

  • @jacoblehew1550
    @jacoblehew1550 2 роки тому

    Looks great and all.
    But if you want to truly see the Father of modern day tin types.
    Go take a worshop by John Coffer in Dundee NY.
    Highly recommended and you don’t have to be gouged by people like osterman for fees on top of fees.
    It’s a flat rate price and you get to keep all your work :)
    And unlike most workshops.
    You can make as many plates as you want :D no limit

    • @Chiaroscuro1991
      @Chiaroscuro1991 Рік тому

      Yes, he is a great teacher but interested parties could also take a workshop with me .. shown demonstrating in this video. My wife and I were actually the first photographers in modern times to teach public workshops in collodion photography. Scully & Osterman Studio, Rochester, NY .. pictured here and also workshops outside the US.

  • @nicolamastrorilli4454
    @nicolamastrorilli4454 3 роки тому

    Eccezionale...

  • @ProfeTakano
    @ProfeTakano 12 років тому

    Thank you B&H !!!

  • @starbuono3333
    @starbuono3333 7 років тому

    Wow !

  • @kbtiest
    @kbtiest 12 років тому

    romantic !

  • @ElPresidenteGeneralisimo
    @ElPresidenteGeneralisimo 12 років тому +2

    Dealing with such dangerous chemicals, I would expect you must want to wash your hands an awful lot

  • @Russel.Idrive
    @Russel.Idrive 3 роки тому

    Why just dont use your smartphone ?

  • @lazyguyrodriguez1
    @lazyguyrodriguez1 10 років тому +1

    where can i find the tabs for this song ?

    • @Chiaroscuro1991
      @Chiaroscuro1991 Рік тому +1

      I was just noodling around with the banjo … most of it is Soldiers Joy

  • @deltafour1212
    @deltafour1212 11 років тому

    Im not a rocket scientist but isn't using a "spirit lamp" and putting the tin on the flame itself an accident waiting to happen?
    With all the fumes from the chemicals used and the collodion itself being highly flammable?
    I hate to see the plate and you catching on fire

    • @Chiaroscuro1991
      @Chiaroscuro1991 Рік тому

      Right … none of the people doing this process exactly the way I demonstrated it were rocket scientists either. The collodion is only outgassing prior to putting the plate into the silver solution. In thousands of plate none have ever caught fire or are likely to when drying the plate

    • @peterrenn6341
      @peterrenn6341 9 місяців тому

      It’s authentic. They can sometimes catch fire if you don’t know what you’re doing. Mark Osterman is very, very experienced.

  • @Piratesjunior
    @Piratesjunior Рік тому

    2:20

  • @andresguerreroramos557
    @andresguerreroramos557 5 років тому

    wauuuu!!!!

  • @CatspitProductions
    @CatspitProductions 11 років тому

    That guy has an awesome studio ;) Come get some Catspit~! ☠

  • @CaptMorteza
    @CaptMorteza 5 років тому

    Music sucks

    • @Chiaroscuro1991
      @Chiaroscuro1991 Рік тому

      Sorry you don’t like it. I was just noodling around with the banjo and thought it went fine.