Garry Fabian Miller (English, born in Bristol in 1957) is an internationally recognised photographic artist, specialising in ‘camera-less’ photographs since the mid-1980s.
Antiquated Processes
Michael Folmen
Michael Flomen (born 1952) is a self-taught Canadian artist who primarily creates photograms, or cameraless photographs in collaboration with nature... Snow, water, firefly light, wind, sand, sediment, shorelines and other natural phenomena make up the elements used to create his photograms.
Julia Margaret Cameron
Julia Margaret Cameron was a British photographer. She became known for her portraits of celebrities of the time, and for photographs with Arthurian and other legendary or heroic themes. Cameron's photographic career was short, spanning eleven years of her life (1864–1875). She took up photography at the relatively late age of 48, when she was given a camera as a present.[2] Her style was not widely appreciated in her own day: her choice to use a soft focus and to treat photography as an art as well as a science, by manipulating the wet collodion process, caused her works to be viewed as "slovenly", "mistakes" and bad photography.
Straw Camera
The straw camera is an innovative analogue camera made by collaborators mick farrell and cliff haynes. The camera is a box filled with 32,000 drinking straws (or layers of corrugated plastic in another version).
Mike Ware
historic processes, such as the Platinotype, Cyanotype and Chrysotype, and the invention of the new Argyrotype process, have been published in both the technical and popular photographic literature; some of these publications are reproduced in these pages.
Autochrome Lumière
The Autochrome Lumière is an early color photography process. Patented in 1903[1] by the Lumière brothers in France and first marketed in 1907,[2] it was the principal color photography process in use before the advent of subtractive color film in the mid-1930s.