Darkroom misadventures coming soon!

R

ray_g

Guest
After much research and waiting, I've finally found my equipment on Craigslist.

For $50 (neg carrier and lens not mentioned, but included), I think it's worth driving the 2 hrs up to Boston for a nice weekend trip :). Someone closer gave his setup away, but I missed it by two days.

I've done my research, and I have Vestal's and Tim Rudman's books coming through the library.

It's basic equipment, but that's all I need now to learn on.

Any tips for a beginner?
 
Yep. And I'll remember not to dunk my CF memory card in the developer :D
 
i have the vestal book.
that man is a genius and cranky too.

i especially like the cranky part...

congrats ray, it's gonna be fun.

i'm missing mine right about now, with the print swap. i could have made a print and sent it off in much less time than it's taking me to play with this whole photoshop/printing thing.

joe
 
That Durst F30 looks very similar to the M301 I got from eBay recently. The size of that enlarger is very practical for turning the bathrrom into a part-time darkroom.
I hope the Gralab 300 works well. I never realized how convenient it is to have a timer hooked on the enlarger until I bought a 450. Congratulations 50 bucks is a great deal for all that equipment and good luck with the wet darkroom.

Regards,

Joseph
 
The durst enlarger is great, and for beginners it may come with its own lens.
Check to see if it is a NEONON... that is a jewel.
Otherwise consider upgrading your lens within a fw months.

Working in the darkroom can be both extremely frustrating or satisfying, some basic check before you start:
- Check that the enlarger is leveled, same with the base
- Check the lens for haze/spots [clean or change]
- Prepare a working area, and a working flow and keep it as uniform as posiible
- Do not expect a perfect print on your 1st trial, it may come but be ready to spend some paper
- Always breath twice before making a print ;)

Enjoy!!!
 
Just an update. I finished unpacking all the stuff and I amazed with this equipment. It 's as though everything were frozen in time, in their original boxes from the 60's and 70's, with all the original instruction manuals and receipts! The previous owner was really very tidy -- I mean even the developing trays, timer (the Gralab timer is good as new!), thermometers, grain focuser, etc were in their boxes.

The lens was a plasticky looking one, so I snagged a Nikkor 50/2.8 N on ebay for $30 yesterday ;)

My paper and developer came from Freestyle today. A couple items more, an I will be ready to go!!
 
ray_g said:
Any tips for a beginner?

Make sure your darkroom is really DARK! And test your safelight!

Otherwise your prints will have gray highlights, and you'll go crazy wondering why. You'll print with contrastier filters, try different developers, different papers. Nothing will help.

There are lots of ways to test a safelight. If you want a really critical one, here it is:

-- You'll need at least two pieces of enlarging paper. For the first one, do NOT use the safelight (yes, this will involve blundering around in the dark a bit.) Put a piece of film leader in the negative carrier (to simulate the most heavily exposed negative you'll ever print) and throw down some coins on the printing paper (you'll see why in a moment.)

-- Now make a test strip, increasing the exposure in small increments. Wash and dry the print.

Examine this print and look for the FIRST test-strip segment on which you can just barely begin to see the outlines of the coins. The segment just before that one represents the most exposure you can give your paper before it starts to show tone in the highlights. Make a note of the exposure time of this segment.

-- Now you're back in the darkroom with the second piece of paper. Don't turn on the safelight yet! Set up the paper the same way as the first time, with coins etc. Expose it for the same amount of time you noted in the step above.

-- Now cover up the whole sheet, coins and all, with a big piece of cardboard. You're FINALLY ready to test the safelight! Turn it on, pull back the cardboard to expose about 1/6 of the paper, and wait two minutes.

-- Repeat every two minutes, pulling back the cardboard to expose another slice, until you've got one slice left covered. Stop here and process the print.

If your safelight were perfect, this print would look dead white. It probably doesn't, though -- after several minutes of exposure, you'll start seeing the ghostly outlines of the coins. The segment before this one is your limit of safelight exposure -- the longest you can work under the safelight without degrading the highlights of your prints.

Why did we do print 1 before we actually tested the safelight? Because printing paper, like film, is subject to a phenomenon called "latensification." If you expose it to light just below its threshold of exposure, it temporarily becomes more sensitive to further exposure.

If you just took a sheet of paper out of the box and did the step 2 safelight test, without doing step 1 first, your safelight test might look fine... but it wouldn't account for latensification. Once you started making actual prints, the paper would become latensified by the enlarger exposure, and be more subject to safelight fog. You'd get veiled highlights and think, "Why? I know my safelight is OK."
 
little things in the darkroom

little things in the darkroom

Get a foot switch that bypasses the timer and lights the enlarger. During the winter and when the air-conditioner is on, wipe the darkroom floor with one pass of a damp mop before entering. Keep you cats and dogs away from the darkroom. Don't use your laundry room as a darkroom. Keep a flashlight handy. Always use a paper safe. Don't work in the darkroom when you're tired. Have good ventilation. If your darkroom area is humid, put 'DampRid' buckets in it. Keep your powdered chemicals dry. Use nitrile gloves when working with selenium toner. Get a portable CD player. Use a changing bag when loading your tank. Keep a kitchen sized trash can in the darkroom and change it often. Have fun. Make mistakes. Learn from your mistakes. Did I mention to have fun?
 
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