"Her photography laps up all that she felt was great in the world. --HARPER'S BAZAAR
"As well as her love for herfamily, she [had] a sincereconcern for the conservation of the environment and for animals. This is reflected throughout her choice of pictures."--FROM THE INTRODUCTION BY ROBERT LASSAM
THIS UNUSUAL BOOK grew out of Linda McCartney's fascination with nineteenth-century photographic printing processes and in particular with the technique of sun printing developed by W. H. Fox Talbot, founder of the modern photographic process. Sun printing relies on natural sunlight to produce an image on paper brushed with a mixture of minerals. For several years, Linda experimented with this method, and the results are prints of great richness in the characteristic Vandyck brown and bright cyan produced by the different chemicals used.NINETEENTH-CENTURY SUN PRINTS had a beautiful but static quality caused by the long exposure time needed to take a photograph. Linda's pictures, by contrast, combine the spontaneity of photographs taken using modern equipment with the subtlety of the old printing methods, producing a distinctive collection of images.A FOREWORD BY LINDA McCARTNEY recounts some of her experiences with sun printing, and Robert Lassam's introduction describes the history of the technique, explaining for the modern photographer how these effects are achieved.A preface by Paul McCartney provides personal insight into Linda's work in photography.
Preface by Paul McCartney
Foreword by Linda McCarmey
Introduction by Robert Lassam
THE PLATES
APPENDIX A
Photogenic Drawing
APPENDIX B
The Cyanotype Process
Bibliography