Where ART Lives Magazine Volume 2 Number 5 | Page 36

EXPOSED I started creating my fine art photography after I retired. I’ve always loved photography and science and sought a way to merge the two. My interests in art combined with my husband’s encouragement and aid led me to the incredible, hidden world of micro-crystal photography. I grow crystals and take photographs of them through the microscope. Of course, the practice is much more complex than that. First I have to determine the right chemicals to use. These chemicals range from ingredients you might put into cookies, such as baker’s vanilla, to components used in makeup or even a common anesthetic. Then I need to safely grow them into crystals. There are several processes but the one I prefer requires liquefying the chemicals using heat, and in my case that means a flame. Fortunately none of the chemicals I use are toxic, though I have been worried about consequences of mixing chemicals, which I often do. The house is still intact so I consider it all a success. So far so good, fingers crossed! Once the crystals begin to form, I carefully mount the slide onto the microscope stage and search the scene, often watching the crystals form right before my eyes. Polarized light brings out the magnificent colors; without it, you wouldn’t see much more than vague shapes and shadows on a white field. I look for an area of crystals that speaks to me or resembles a familiar sight, such as flowers or a landscape. Photogra 36 pher Fo cus