Joni Sternbach is documenting surf communities throughout the world 
using a process as old as photography itself. Wet plate tintypes. Like 
Matthew Brady's portraits of Lincoln. 
-- Steiny
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This is from Joni's site...
Sternbach uses both large format film and early photographic 
processes to create contemporary landscapes and portraits. Her work 
centers on our relationship with water, contrasting some of the most 
desolate deserts in the American West to iconic surf beaches around the 
world. 
"Photographer Joni Sternbach gets a lot of attention when she takes her wet-plate collodion equipment, used for the intricate photo process made famous during the U.S. Civil War, to beaches around the world. Besides the large cameras, pre-mixed chemicals and jugs of water, a dark box is required to create her tintype photos. “Once you go to a small beach with a big outfit you are very noticeable,” the native New Yorker says. Sunbathers, surfers and swimmers all wonder what’s inside, often asking her whether it’s a puppet show or cappuccino maker. “The size of the camera and the immediacy of the wet-plate collodion is what really draws people into this project,” Joni says. 'That is why the process is so important to me.' "
More from Joni:
"Many years ago I bought a handmade book with an antique tintype of a woman embedded into the cover. I intended to turn the book into a photo album of my pictures or maybe even my father’s. However, as I assessed the pictures in my archive and my fathers, I found none that I deemed worthy of this book with a beautiful cover. It remains blank to this day. The tintype on the cover beguiled me with the importance and meaning of a portrait. I did not know when I discovered this book, that I would one day be making tintypes myself.
The art and craft of making wet-plate collodion, tintypes 
is elaborate and dirty work. The silver nitrate used to sensitize the 
plates can oxidize on your skin and form a dark brown stain. The process
 is a finicky one that necessitates patience, experience and a touch of 
luck to make a good plate. It requires a portable darkbox or tent to 
sensitize and develop your plates in while on location. Your plates are 
the same size as the back of your camera, so if you want large plates, 
you must have a large camera.
The tin is coated with collodion (a mixture of gun cotton,
 alcohol and ether) and poured by hand on to your plate. It’s then 
sensitized in a bath of silver nitrate for several minutes. Once that’s 
done it’s placed into the back of the camera and it’s ready for 
exposure. Exposure times are guesstimated, and because the process is a 
wet one, the speed of the medium is very slow. My exposures range from ½
 second to minutes, depending on subject matter, lens and light.
The next step is development, which is done in the dark 
box. Once developed and rinsed, the plate is taken out of the dark box 
and into the daylight where it’s fixed. This is the moment of excitement
 and discovery. As the plate is submerged into the fixer bath it 
transforms right in front of your eyes. It goes from looking like a 
bluish negative to becoming a positive image on blackened metal…in 
essence, a tintype.
This dark art, the craft of collodion is like 
old-fashioned magic. There are potions and elixirs that stain your 
fingers and have a strong smell. There is a dark box with a cloth of 
mystery and enchantment. There is a feeling of anticipation and 
exhilaration as each plate emerges from the fixer. The sense of 
collaboration is palpable, as my subjects and I both wait for the image 
to clear, to see if we each held up our end and made a good picture."
Abraham Lincoln. Photo: Mathew Brady
Jonathan Steinberg. Photo: Joni Sternbach



 
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Steiny!
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