• KEMYSTERY is a manufacturer and supplier of high quality 5-Bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl phosphate disodium salt CAS 102185-33-1, a water soluble, chromogenic substrate used for visualizing alkaline phosphatase activity. (kemystery.com)
  • The potential of oxidized developers in a color photographic process however, was first realized by another German chemist, Rudolf Fischer, who, in 1912, filed a patent describing a chromogenic process to develop both positives and negatives using indoxyl, and thio-indoxyl-based color developers as dye couplers in a light-sensitive silver halide emulsion. (wikipedia.org)
  • Although the paper's name was changed to "Kodak Ektacolor Paper" in 1958, the terminology "Type-C Print" persisted, and has become a popular term for chromogenic prints made from negatives still in use today, with the name "Type-R Print" becoming its reversal film counterpart. (wikipedia.org)
  • Chromogenic prints made from negatives became obsolete with the release of chromogenic digital prints, which have become the most common photographic print today. (wikipedia.org)
  • Chromogenic colour paper is commonly used to print colour negatives. (valokuvataiteenmuseo.fi)
  • A chromogenic print, also known as a C-print or C-type print, a silver halide print, or a dye coupler print, is a photographic print made from a color negative, transparency or digital image, and developed using a chromogenic process. (wikipedia.org)
  • He additionally noted these developers could create beautiful photographic effects. (wikipedia.org)
  • 698 Agfa patented both the developer for this print and its photographic process, and promptly developed and released in 1936 Agfacolor Neu, the first chromogenic print, which was a color print film that could be developed using a transparency. (wikipedia.org)
  • 698 Agfa developed a chromogenic negative film by 1939, which could be developed directly on a companion paper to the film, although this film was never commercialized. (wikipedia.org)
  • In 1955, Kodak introduced a chromogenic paper named "Type C", which was the first color negative paper Kodak sold to other labs and individual photographers. (wikipedia.org)
  • Our Cn2 "COLOR NEGATIVE" developer is combined with the prebath accelerant (which kicks off development) to produce proper ECN-2 density. (cinestill.film)
  • Notwithstanding the success of chromogenic prints in the amateur and professional market, it wasn't considered a medium for fine-art photography up to the 1970s. (wikipedia.org)
  • The pioneers in the use of chromogenic prints and in the use of color photography as a whole in fine-art were photographers such as Ernst Haas, which was profiled by the Museum of Modern Art in its first exhibition of color photography in 1962. (wikipedia.org)
  • 257 Other pioneering fine-art color photographers who printed their photographs on chromogenic prints include William Eggleston:251 and Stephen Shore. (wikipedia.org)
  • Their works, and those of many others, caused chromogenic prints to become the preferred medium for contemporary photography by the 1990s. (wikipedia.org)
  • The most common printed colour photographs are chromogenic colour prints. (valokuvataiteenmuseo.fi)
  • Due to their simple development process and their cheap price, chromogenic printing became wildly popular in amateur photography, and by the 1960s it overtook black and white printing in the amateur photofinishing market. (wikipedia.org)
  • It may be a less complicated process than ECN-2, but Cs2 is actually more advanced chemistry, utilizing chemical compounds and technology which didn't exist when ECN-2 was originally designed. (cinestill.film)
  • After exposure, the silver image is developed (or reduced) by a color developer. (wikipedia.org)
  • In its reaction to the print, the color developer is oxidized in the areas of exposed silver, and subsequently reacts with another chemical, the dye coupler, which is present throughout the emulsion. (wikipedia.org)