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While more and more casual photographers these days are turning to the likes of Instagram and VSCO to digitally “filter” their photos, photographer Jon Verney uses analog photography and a very unusual process: he dips his photos in thermal hot springs.
Verney says he has always been fascinated with the alchemy of film photography. While working as a darkroom tech at an Italian school years ago, a professor there commented that the high concentration of sulphur in thermal hot springs could give bleached photos a natural sepia tone.
So, Verney tried it, and the process has come to define his work.
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The “redevelopment toning” is a 2-step process. After printing a 4×4-inch photo with traditional processes in a darkroom, Verney places each shot in a bath of potassium ferricyanide. This bleaches them and reverts the silver in the emulsion to being “undeveloped” again.
Next, he brings a batch of his bleached photos to various geothermal locations around the world (e.g. Iceland, Wyoming, California) and immerses them in the waters of thermal systems.
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These waters redevelop the photos, with the new color, tone, and texture based on the geochemical makeup of each pool of water.
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“Essentially, each photo absorbed aspects of the landscape, so it was really kind of a collaboration with these geological entities,” Verney tells PetaPixel. “They had equal agency in the making of the work.”
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You can find more of Verney’s work on his website.
Image credits: Photographs by Jon Verney and used with permission
from PetaPixel http://petapixel.com/2016/03/15/photographer-uses-thermal-hot-springs-filter-photos/
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