GermanB
User Condition??
I use a spare bathroom to set up my darkroom only for contacts and prints (35mm and 6x6), to develop rolls use a changing bag. I think this year I will set up a permanent darkroom but I have to negotiate with the wife... 🙂
David Goldfarb said:That is a bit much, but are you sure the problem is the enlarger? Your negs could be overexposed and/or overdeveloped, or possibly you are using a contact speed paper or your paper developer could be bad or the wrong dilution. What film and developer, EI, time and temperature are you using, and what paper and developer are you using?
You may also have the wrong bulb in your enlarger. What kind of enlarger is it, and what kind of head does it have?
jvx said:Yep, it definitely is the enlarger. I have printed the exact same negatives with my own paper and chemicals at other places and exposure times were less than 1/10th of those on my own enlarger. It's a Durst C35, replaced the bulb, didn't fix anything. There is no ND filter. I have both the head for 6x6 and 35mm negatives, both give extremely long times. Otherwise there is nothing wrong with the quality of the prints.
I wouldn't mind as much if it was fine-art photography I'm doing, but unfortunately photojournalism is my thing - time matters!
pesphoto said:I built my darkroom in our basement. We rent, but the landlords are really good about it. When we move I can take it down and bring it with us. So its not totally permanent, but works. I use an Omega B22 enlarger.
Here are a few pics on my website
One can make do... My first darkroom was a walk-in closet, across the hall from the bath. The inner end of the closet was my "dry side", and closer to the door along one side was a support for three trays. I mixed chemicals in the bath and brought the trays into the closet. Then, after securing all light-sensitive materials, I opened the closet door and carried my print(s) from the fixer tray across the hall to the washing tray in the tub. Maybe you can arrange something similar...visiondr said:Can one establish a dark room for enlarging only without water and drain? I can develop film at our basement utility sink. But there's no practical way to set up a wet darkroom in my house.