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Making Collodion From Scratch


DEC 26, 2017 ANTON ORLOV

A few days ago, for the first time ever in my experience with wet plate photography, I mixed up
collodion from scratch. I thought I’d share about the experience.
First of all, plain USP (U.S. Pharmacopeia) Collodion is a mixture of ether, alcohol, and nitrocellulose
(also known as nitrated or guncotton). It is the nitrocellulose that acts as a binder and carrier for
photo-sensitive salts of silver while making wet collodion images.

The vast majority of the time, when people say they mix collodion from scratch, they buy USP
Collodion premixed and then add various bromides and iodides. More ether and alcohol also need to
be added in order to reduce the concentration of nitrocellulose from 4%, which is the USP standard,
to about 2% in most modern collodion formulas.

However, during the 19th century, nitrated collodion could be purchased a lot more readily than today
(it is highly flammable) so all of the old formulas assume you have it and just give measurements
based on adding in raw guncotton.

Not long ago, I managed to procure a small quantity of raw nitrocellulose and was super excited to try
it. I dug through a couple of historic texts and settled on a first formula given in the 1880 publication
The Ferrotype And How To Make It. I also got more salts than needed for just that formula, so after
I’m done with this batch I’ll try some others.

Converting the old grains to grams and anachronistic ounces to sensible milliliters took a minute or
two and then I reduced the batch size to about 120ml total so that I could go through it in a timely
manner and try something else. Here’s the formula I used (note that nitrocellulose concentration there
only came out to be 1.3%):

60ml Grain Alcohol (ethanol) 95% strength


60ml Ether
1.6g Nitrocellulose
1g Ammonium Iodide
0.5g Cadmium Iodide
0.5g Cadmium Bromide

I added ether to alcohol first, then the salts and then guncotton.

As you’re adding nitrocellulose, constant stirring is required. I forgot about that part and ended up
with a gelatinous mass at the bottom of the flask that was sticky and semi-transparent. Luckily I have
a magnetic stirrer and so after helping the goo unstick from the bottom, I just left it on there for 20
minutes or so and, however unwillingly, the cotton eventually did dissolve.

In the book, it says that it’s ready to use “as soon as it has settles sufficiently clear.” Well, when I did it,
it never clouded up, so it might have been good to go as soon as everything dissolved. My friend
Race stopped by, though, and we went out for coffee while letting the mixture rest and mature a bit.

After 2 hours, I decided to give it a try and set up a quick still life of things found around the studio.
Race stayed on to watch the experiment and to record it. Here’s a masterful shot by Race of yours
truly pouring the first plate.
To my elation, the image came out rather well, though a bit overexposed and on the flatter side of
contrast, but that’s explainable since fresh collodion always tends to be overly reactive and flat. Here
it is being washed after development.

And here it is after fixing, still wet.


Note in the above image that on the top left there’s a black torn corner that wasn’t present there in
the photo of the plate being washed after development. In that corner collodion layer lifted off the
glass just a bit and was very fragile, so the action of water rushing over it while washing off the fixer
put a tear in there. Normally I don’t see any lifting of collodion on my glass and this time I did nothing
different in glass preparation, so I have to attribute this to the collodion.

I also have to note that this collodion seems to be on the thin side (perhaps it would be best to step
up gun cotton concentration to 2%…?) and while wiping off some minor fog on the plate I did hours
later and doing it in my usual manner with a wet loose cotton ball I did put a tiny tear into the
emulsion, something that again almost never happens to me.

So yeah, this collodion might be a little more fragile than I’m used to, but I think I can easily get used
to that.

Viewing alternative or even regular gelatin silver prints or plates on a computer screen is nearly
pointless. There’s no way for the viewer to see the silver playing on the plate or how thick the
collodion is… This surface was beautiful — the silver was dense with large crystals in highlight and
seemed brighter than usual. I couldn’t resist and tried burnishing it.

Burnishing is a technique where one rubs the plate with something soft, essentially flattening silver
crystals and making the image have a very shiny metallic appearance in the areas where it’s done.
There’s no way to fully show it (even videos fall short), but below are similar close-up images of the
plate before and after burnishing. The full plate after burnishing is the first image you saw in this post.
Note below that along with reflective quality burnishing also changes the tone of the image to a
cooler steel grey.
I waited another 4 hours and gave it another go with a new still life. By now the color has changed to
a slightly deeper yellow and that was a good sign as that’s what collodion does as it matures. I did a
few plates before I arrived at the one below. First one was still a bit overexposed, but the contrast
was a lot better. I turned down the flash power and put in a smaller Waterhouse stop in my Dallmeyer
2B. 2nd plate was there exposure-wise, but I adjusted the composition a bit and so below is plate #3
of that batch done 6 hours after collodion was mixed.

Mixing up collodion from scratch was indeed somehow exciting and satisfying, so now I understand a
lot better all the other folks who’ve been advising me to do so for a while. Now that I’ve had a taste of
mixing it up with pure nitrated cotton, I will have to find me some more of that magic fluff or perhaps
resort to making it myself as it’s really not that hard given proper precautions and equipment.

For now, I have enough to make maybe 6-7 more small batches, so I’m thinking of trying out a few
more mixes and then zeroing in on one and making a few batches of it in a row to really get
comfortable.

About the author: Anton Orlov is an analog photographer and the man behind The Photo Palace, a
35-foot school bus that has been converted into a darkroom and presentation area for educational
and artistic purposes. He previously created a transparent camera and the world’s smallest
tintypes. Visit his website for more of his work and writing. This article was also published here.

TAG S: A N TONO R LOV, C H E MIC A L, C H E MIST RY, CO L LOD I O N, D I Y, D O I TYO U R S E L F, P H OTOPA L AC E, WETPL AT E, WETPL AT E CO L LO D I O N

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