Guy,
Considering I enjoy coffee almost as much as pinhole photography, I don't see any conflicts. While I would not like to consider myself the upload gallery "police", I guess that if it started filling up with a lot of non-pinhole coffee images I might be forced to put on my pinhole sheriff's badge.
Have you experimented much with the freshness and origin of the coffee you use?
:-)
Gregg
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Guy Glorieux [mailto:guy.glorieux@sympatico.ca]
>
> Hi all,
>
> I took the liberty of uploading a print illustrating the results of
> processing a print in coffee developer, as per the article
> published by
> Dr. Scott Williams from Rochester Institute ot Technology, at:
> http://www.isc.rit.edu/~andpph/text-coffee.html
>
> The picture can be seen at:
> http://www.pinhole.com/discussion/upload/images/pose_cafe.jpg
>
> Several words of caution though
> 1. The picture was printed on the occasion of a special exhibition of
> my photo club three years ago, entitled "Pose-Café" (Coffee Break). I
> had suggested that we use this process to illustrate the point that
> coffee is an integral part of the picture making process and
> that it can
> find space even in the processing trays, rather than just the mug!
> 2. The picture is not mine but was taken on a 35mm camera by
> one of my
> fellow club member.
> 3. The picture is not a pinhole (Gregg, I took your silence after my
> last eMail on the subject as an implicit agreement that I
> could post the
> picture for illustrative purposes).
>
> (I hope that I will not stir a debate over the use of the
> image area for
> the list... This would be quite opposite to my intentions).
>
> I hope members enjoy the picture and that it will stir more
> interest in
> this particular process.
>
> Best wishes,
>
> Guy Glorieux
> Montreal, Canada
Received on Wed Dec 13 11:20:21 2000
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