VF101
Established
As I have mentioned in another thread, I recently decided to start wet printing. I have never done that before, though I have been doing photography back in the pure analog ages of the eighties.
I'll keep a diary about my experiences here, perhaps someone may find it interesting or just funny to read about all the mistakes I'll gonna make. I do film development for more than a year now (APX 100 and Tri-X in Rodinal), so the basic developing process is not new to me. And as I was working in the DNA lab of our university for nearly a year, I'm not new to handling chemicals either.
My "new" enlarger (Durst M601 from the late seventies, I think) arrived last week. There were several loose parts, and I have not been able to tinker them together until I found a scanned manual somewhere on the web. The enlarger has just a black and white head, but a filter drawer should enable me to use multigrade paper. I've just ordered a set of multi-contrast filters for this purpose.
The next step is to prepare my semi-dedicated darkroom. It's a bathroom that is seldomly used and big enough to store the enlarger on a sideboard. Two sinks should come handy for watering my prints, not to mention the tub for really big prints. 😉 I still have to get a plywood panel to darken the glazed door though.
I'll start my printing endeavor with Tetenal Eukobrom and Adox Easy Print RC 311 paper. I've got already a fixer, which I'll use for film development as well as for prints (but not the same liquid for both). What I really worry about is the dust problem. Scanning my negatives gives a plethora of little white dust spots, so I fear to get prints with little black dots all over them. Thus I also ordered a film cleaner spray.
I'll keep you updated as soon as the developer and paper arrive.
I'll keep a diary about my experiences here, perhaps someone may find it interesting or just funny to read about all the mistakes I'll gonna make. I do film development for more than a year now (APX 100 and Tri-X in Rodinal), so the basic developing process is not new to me. And as I was working in the DNA lab of our university for nearly a year, I'm not new to handling chemicals either.
My "new" enlarger (Durst M601 from the late seventies, I think) arrived last week. There were several loose parts, and I have not been able to tinker them together until I found a scanned manual somewhere on the web. The enlarger has just a black and white head, but a filter drawer should enable me to use multigrade paper. I've just ordered a set of multi-contrast filters for this purpose.
The next step is to prepare my semi-dedicated darkroom. It's a bathroom that is seldomly used and big enough to store the enlarger on a sideboard. Two sinks should come handy for watering my prints, not to mention the tub for really big prints. 😉 I still have to get a plywood panel to darken the glazed door though.
I'll start my printing endeavor with Tetenal Eukobrom and Adox Easy Print RC 311 paper. I've got already a fixer, which I'll use for film development as well as for prints (but not the same liquid for both). What I really worry about is the dust problem. Scanning my negatives gives a plethora of little white dust spots, so I fear to get prints with little black dots all over them. Thus I also ordered a film cleaner spray.
I'll keep you updated as soon as the developer and paper arrive.
Attachments
Last edited: