Cyanotype

Cyanotype is a photographic printing process that produces images in a distinctive Prussian blue. It is one of the earliest non-silver photographic methods, invented by Sir John Herschel in 1842, and widely used for both artistic and scientific applications.


Definition

Cyanotype is a contact printing process that uses light-sensitive iron salts (ferric ammonium citrate and potassium ferricyanide). When exposed to ultraviolet light and then washed in water, the chemicals oxidise to form ferric ferrocyanide (blue pigment).


Process Overview

  1. A substrate (usually paper, fabric, or vellum) is coated with a cyanotype solution

  2. A transparent negative or object is placed on the surface

  3. The print is exposed to UV light (e.g. sunlight)

  4. After exposure, it is rinsed in water, fixing the image


Key Characteristics


Historical and Artistic Use


Relevance to Your Practice

Cyanotype serves as a model of non-algorithmic computation: it is processual, environmentally contingent, and chemically governed. In your framework, it exemplifies:

Cyanotype might be thought of as a low-level functor from spatial opacity to chromatic registration—translating the presence or absence of light into a spectral outcome via chemical means. It highlights how environmental and material conditions are not noise but structure, inseparable from the formal qualities of the image.

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