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For your consideration today is this vintage print from 1949 featuring.........Print #XXXIII(33)....................Tempio di Vesta e S. Maria in Cosmedin..............................asAs made by the Master of the Bromoil Transfer Process Photographic Print D. R. Peretti Griva(1882-1962)...........Each Oversized Monochrome print measures 12" wide x 16-1/2" tall, on Thick Heavy stock paper.........the engraved inner portion measures 7-1/2" wide x 10-1/2" tall, with thick engraving indentations as borders.....all of these stunning views of Rome, Italy, are printed in plate by Griva, with the title on the left margin in Italian, and his signature printed on the right...(The original photographs that these prints were made from are in private collections and Museums around the world, but, mostly in Italy....most would sell for $5,000 on up, in today's market)....These are Original prints from 1949, not reproductions, from an out of print book on Rome, Italy, featuring Griva's Artwork, and all have nice wide margins for easy matting and framing....paper is clean, crisp and free of defects....overall condition is excellent...59 years old, and these look so fresh.....a testiment to the quality of paper and printing techniques used ...Peretti Griva, of Turin, was a master of the bromoil transfer process and a leading member of the Gruppo Piemontese per la Fotograpica Artistica............look at his works here....at once, we realize his incredible talent for capturing exactly the right setting and mood.....with a minimum of elements involved..... These are beautiful prints....on beautiful paper....for the discerning buyer, perhaps fresh back from a trip to Rome....you will find a print in this collection that will bring your special memories back to you, and, to cherish forever......rarely seen except in European Art Galleries, these lovely prints have a life and a feel of their own...like an expert painter, Griva captures the heart and soul of Rome...a timeless city...he seems in love with each scene..and his style of simplistic impressionism evokes strong emotions from those who understand the history, magic and romance of the Eternal City...... Please note...I offer free shipping,(USA ONLY please.....Overseas buyers email for quote) which for prints this large, often runs 7-9 dollars...protection against bending is of utmost importance, thus, the 4 sheets of cardboard used.....or tubes.... Here is a little information on Bromoil Transfers...a VERY complicated printing process, and, ghastly expensive...the results speak for themselves, and, there is no doubt about why this technique is so powerful..... ========================================== Bromoil ProcessFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bromoil by Josef Jindřich Šechtl, 1920s The Bromoil Process was an early photographic process that was very popular with the Pictorialists during the first half of the twentieth century. The soft, paint-like qualities of the prints are very typical for this genre, and have recently led to some art photographers using the process again. The bromoil process was based on the oil print, whose origins go back to the mid-nineteenth century. A drawback of oil prints was that the gelatin used was too slow to permit an enlarger to be used, so that negatives had to be the same dimensions as the positives. After G.E.H. Rawlins published a 1904 article on the oil print process, E.J. Wall in 1907 described theoretically how it should be possible to use a smaller negative in an enlarger to produce a silver bromide positive, which should then be bleached and hardened, to be inked afterwards as in the oil process. C Welborne Piper then executed this theory in practice, and so the bromoil process was born. [edit] MethodTo explain the bromoil process, it is helpful to look at the oil print first. The prints are made on paper with a thick gelatin layer that has been sensitized with dichromate salts. Exposure using a negative for contact-print leads to hardening of the dichromated gelatin, in direct relation of the amount of light received. After exposure, the print gets soaked in water. The non-hardened parts absorb relatively more water than the hardened parts, so after sponge-drying the print, while still moist, one can apply a lithographic ink to the oil-base. The non-mixing character of oil and water results in a coloring of the exposed parts of the print, creating a positive image. The ink application requires considerable skill, and as a result no two prints are alike. Bromoil prints are a direct variety of this process: One starts with a normally developed print on a silver bromide paper which is then chemically bleached and hardened. The gelatin which originally had the darkest tones, is hardened the most, the highlights remain absorbent to water. This print can then be inked like the oil print. Long-term effects on stability: Inadequate rinsing of the chrome salts can lead to discoloration of the prints under influence of light in the longer term. The irregular thickness of the gelatin layer can, in unfavourable conditions, lead to stresses in the pictorial layer, which can be damaged this way. This technique was used to produce color prints into the 1930s before the color-film was developed: Three identical black & white photographic takes of an object were made on Ilford Hypersensitive Panchromatic film with the corresponding filters (blue, green, red) The developed negatives were enlarged and transposed on bromide-silver photographic paper. The bromide-silver layer was bleached and tanned as described above. Rather hard bromoil ink was applied, yellow on the blue-filtered, red on the green-filtered and blue on the red-filtered matrice. The fine-graded colored matrices, exactly fitted one above the other, are passed alternately through an etching press. Thus a transferred color picture on absorbing and fibre-free paper or even cloth is produced (cf. links below F. Rontag). A picture appears that reminds the beholder of pastel-paintings, which however show the distinctivenes of detail and contour of photography
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