pigment powder - meaning and definition. What is pigment powder
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What (who) is pigment powder - definition

PHOTOGRAPHIC PRINT MADE BY THE CARBON PROCESS, WHICH USES CARBON PIGMENT AND GELATIN TO TRANSFER IMAGES TO A PAPER SUPPORT
Carbro; Carbon Print; Pigment printing; Pigment print
  • 1932 Carbro process color print by [[Nickolas Muray]]

Wenzhou pig powder         
CHINESE SNACK
Wenzhou pig powder
Wenzhou pig powder () is a noodle soup dish made with rice noodles, pig intestine and duck or pig blood. It comes from Wenzhou, in Zhejiang, China.
Pulverulence         
DRY, BULK MATERIAL COMPOSED OF MANY FINE SOLID PARTICLES
Pulverulence; Powders; POWDER; Powdered medicine; Powder (substance); 🝋
·noun The state of being pulverulent; abundance of dust or powder; dustiness.
Powder         
DRY, BULK MATERIAL COMPOSED OF MANY FINE SOLID PARTICLES
Pulverulence; Powders; POWDER; Powdered medicine; Powder (substance); 🝋
·vt To sprinkle with salt; to corn, as meat.
II. Powder ·vi To use powder on the hair or skin; as, she paints and powders.
III. Powder ·vi To be reduced to powder; to become like powder; as, some salts powder easily.
IV. Powder ·vt To sprinkle with powder, or as with powder; to be sprinkle; as, to powder the hair.
V. Powder ·noun An explosive mixture used in gunnery, blasting, ·etc.; gunpowder. ·see Gunpowder.
VI. Powder ·noun The fine particles to which any dry substance is reduced by pounding, grinding, or triturating, or into which it falls by decay; dust.
VII. Powder ·vt To reduce to fine particles; to pound, grind, or rub into a powder; to Comminute; to Pulverize; to Triturate.

Wikipedia

Carbon print

A carbon print is a photographic print with an image consisting of pigmented gelatin, rather than of silver or other metallic particles suspended in a uniform layer of gelatin, as in typical black-and-white prints, or of chromogenic dyes, as in typical photographic color prints.

In the original version of the printing process, carbon tissue (a temporary support sheet coated with a layer of gelatin mixed with a pigment—originally carbon black, from which the name derives) is bathed in a potassium dichromate sensitizing solution, dried, then exposed to strong ultraviolet light through a photographic negative, hardening the gelatin in proportion to the amount of light reaching it. The tissue is then developed by treatment with warm water, which dissolves the unhardened gelatin. The resulting pigment image is physically transferred to a final support surface, either directly or indirectly. In an important early 20th century variation of the process, known as carbro (carbon-bromide) printing, contact with a conventional silver bromide paper print, rather than exposure to light, was used to selectively harden the gelatin. A wide variety of colored pigments can be used instead of carbon black.

The process can produce images of very high quality which are exceptionally resistant to fading and other deterioration. It was developed in the mid-19th century in response to concerns about the fading of early types of silver-based black-and-white prints, which was already becoming apparent within a relatively few years of their introduction.

The most recent development in the process was made by the American photographer Charles Berger in 1993 with the introduction of a non-toxic sensitizer that presented none of the health and safety hazards of the toxic (now EU-restricted) dichromate sensitizer.