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An anthotype (from Greek άνθος anthos "flower" and τύπος týpos "imprint", also called Nature Printing) is an created using material from |Malin Fabbri, Anthotypes – Explore the darkroom in your garden and make photographs using plants, January 1, 2021 by Malin Fabbri

An Anthotype Emulsions, Volume 2, September 27, 2023, by Malin Fabbri is made from crushed flower petals or any other light-sensitive plant, fruit or vegetable.

A sheet of paper is covered with the emulsion, and then it is dried.

Some leaves, a transparent photo positive or other material is placed on the paper; and then it is exposed to direct full sunlight until the image part not covered by the material is bleached out by the sun rays.

The original color remains in the shadowed parts depending on the exposure. The paper remains sensitive against such rays. It cannot be fixed.

Note: The color of anthocyanidins, anthocyans, carotinoids, and other light sensitive plant material may depend on PH of the water and of the paper.


History
The photo-sensitive properties of plants and vegetables have been known to scholars for centuries. Among many early observations the experiments of Henri August Vogel in are of particular interest. In 1816 he discovered that an alcoholic of either red , violets or turned white behind blue glass in a few days, while it remained unchanged behind red glass after about the same time. Cotton and paper colored with these tinctures exhibited the same differences.

The anthotype process was discovered in 1839 by Sir John Herschel. Herschel referenced an experiment on October 11, 1839 in a paper published in 1840 at the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Herschel gave the anthotype process a proper introduction in his 1842 paper to the same institution. built on Herschel's research and documented it in a letter to him dated 1845. Sir John Herschel presented her findings to the Royal Society, giving her full credit in his 1845 paper.

Herschel's research into making photographic images from flowers was limited and was ultimately abandoned since no commercial application was feasible from a process which takes days to produce an image.

The process continued to be listed in photographic literature of the time but was likely little used.

Over time the process earned a reputation for being too impractical. Image permanence have been brought into question, but this problem seems to be mostly related to choice of flower or plant matter.


How it works

Other flower suggestions
Henry H. Snelling writes based on his research: "--or sweet scented violet, yields to alcohol a rich blue color, which it imparts in high perfection to paper. Senecio Splendens -- or double purple , yields a beautiful color to paper."

Bingham, quoting by , recommends Corchorus japonicus flower (japanese Jute) for a " fine yellow colour" that " upon exposure to sunlight, it is in about half an hour rendered quite white".

  • Heritage-Tilley, Clive.
  • Snelling, Henry H. The History and Practice of the Art of Photography. New York, 1849.
  • Eder, Josef. The History of Photography. Dover Press, 1978


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