Pherdinand
the snow must go on
Scr.. digital, I just bought BW paper of over 20 kg, second hand of course
I have found a similarly weird colleague interested in this outdated business of black and white analog photography. We got almost all necessary toys to start a darkroom together in his bathroom. A Durst m300 and an LPL7700, and both seem to work fine (the lpl is a monster!) and the small bits and pieces are here already. Now i found a good offern on photo paper, mostly agfa multigrade, some 6-700 sheets, some of them even very large up to 50x60cm (don't know what to do with that, lol, maybe we will just cut them into pieces, no way we can develop/fix those monsters)
i hope properly kept 5 years old paper is still okay
so only the chemicals are missing and we're all set!
Next weekend:my very first printing session
wish me luck!
Is there any trick i should b aware of?
I have found a similarly weird colleague interested in this outdated business of black and white analog photography. We got almost all necessary toys to start a darkroom together in his bathroom. A Durst m300 and an LPL7700, and both seem to work fine (the lpl is a monster!) and the small bits and pieces are here already. Now i found a good offern on photo paper, mostly agfa multigrade, some 6-700 sheets, some of them even very large up to 50x60cm (don't know what to do with that, lol, maybe we will just cut them into pieces, no way we can develop/fix those monsters)
i hope properly kept 5 years old paper is still okay
so only the chemicals are missing and we're all set!
Next weekend:my very first printing session
Is there any trick i should b aware of?
Roger Hicks
Veteran
Yes, 5-y-o paper should be fine.
The single most important thing is this: ALWAYS DEVELOP PAPER TO COMPLETION. If you hae to 'snatch' the print after a few seconds because it's going too dark, too fast, it's over-exposed. Re-make it with less exposure. 'Completion' at 20C or above should be 2-3 minutes.
Have fun!
Cheers,
R.
The single most important thing is this: ALWAYS DEVELOP PAPER TO COMPLETION. If you hae to 'snatch' the print after a few seconds because it's going too dark, too fast, it's over-exposed. Re-make it with less exposure. 'Completion' at 20C or above should be 2-3 minutes.
Have fun!
Cheers,
R.
rxmd
May contain traces of nut
Sounds like a good deal. Agfa MCP hasn't been made in a while but as a paper it's absolutely fine and rather forgiving, a good thing to start with.
Keep the big sheets as they are. Sometimes you want to make big prints, you know, and big prints are the best part of darkroom work.
For developing & fixing them, you can get a tank (something like a Jobodrum 4550, they go for a song on eBay, I got mine for 1 EUR plus shipping). Or you can use a big, flat plastic box that you get at places like Blokker, the kind that people use to put bedsheets and the like underneath their beds. It's sufficient to get one tray, just pour the chemicals in and out in sequence. Timing is uncritical anyway with paper if you always develop it to the end, as Roger suggested.
Keep the big sheets as they are. Sometimes you want to make big prints, you know, and big prints are the best part of darkroom work.
Pherdinand
the snow must go on
thanks guys
yeah i'm also willing to be patient with the large sheets, especially that there is plenty of small ones, but i just quickly made the math and to process a 50x60 sheet one needs at least 5 litres of chemicals! (assuming only 1cm deep "bath" for it and a 70x70-ish tray)
so i'll look into the tank thing.
We also got a paper dev tank with the small things but it's fitting max 20x30.
We go small first, anyway.
There's also a bunch of baryta paper in the deal, curious to see how that is. I think i've never seen a print on baryta, or maybe in a museum i did. Didn't TOUCH any, for sure
I got a 60mm f/4 rodagon for the LPL enlarger, i've understood it's a very good lens (the original included was a rogonar) so no excuses if we mess it up. Although i thought it's the wide angle rodagon that does 6x6 too
) and it's not
) so, no 6x6 for now, and i'm in for more shoppin'
i'm excited, haha
yeah i'm also willing to be patient with the large sheets, especially that there is plenty of small ones, but i just quickly made the math and to process a 50x60 sheet one needs at least 5 litres of chemicals! (assuming only 1cm deep "bath" for it and a 70x70-ish tray)
so i'll look into the tank thing.
We also got a paper dev tank with the small things but it's fitting max 20x30.
We go small first, anyway.
There's also a bunch of baryta paper in the deal, curious to see how that is. I think i've never seen a print on baryta, or maybe in a museum i did. Didn't TOUCH any, for sure
I got a 60mm f/4 rodagon for the LPL enlarger, i've understood it's a very good lens (the original included was a rogonar) so no excuses if we mess it up. Although i thought it's the wide angle rodagon that does 6x6 too
i'm excited, haha
FrankS
Registered User
Have fun, Pherdinand! Darkroom printing is very rewarding.
maddoc
... likes film again.
Is it possible to develop B&W prints in a Jobodrum 4550 tank ? How does that work, with some kind of agitation ? Just asking because I had to stop wet-printing because of the smell and possible splashes (especially from fixing solution) just before our son was born. (A baby-bath and open developer trays in the same small bath-room are no good solution ...
)
What I can recommend from my small experience is a very good grain microscope (magnifier ?) to adjust focus.
What I can recommend from my small experience is a very good grain microscope (magnifier ?) to adjust focus.
rxmd
May contain traces of nut
Is it possible to develop B&W prints in a Jobodrum 4550 tank ? How does that work, with some kind of agitation ?
Well, prints is what the 4500 series tanks were made for, I think
nikon_sam
Shooter of Film...
Concerning the 5 year old paper...you might want to develop an unexposed sheet before trying to print a neg just to check it out... I bought a bunch of used paper (not too sure of age nor how it was kept but I did buy it from a photo store so I thought it would be okay...it wasn't) try this before you do any real printing...
Have fun, take your time don't rush it...that's when you make big mistakes..
Have fun, take your time don't rush it...that's when you make big mistakes..
crawdiddy
qu'est-ce que c'est?
Darkroom printing of B&W is sort of a completely different obsession than photography itself. It's very addictive. It's a lot of fun. Slightly different in that you get immediate gratification, unlike with exposing film. Seeing the image develop before you (under Kodak OC Safelight illumination) is pure magic. Have fun.
Pherdinand
the snow must go on
well, we did it yesterday, as my avatar picture shows
It was a lot of fun, so much that we stopped at 3 in the night which rendered me half useless for today
It was easier than I thought. What I was surprised of, was that exposure times were in the 7-10 seconds range only, at f/16 (!) , for normal negative frames and 13x18cm paper. Probably because we sued the 6x7 enlarger with a huge column, i can imagine a strong 100watt halogen lamp helps for large film/large magnification to reduce times.
Anyway, we even used the color mixing head for some contrast manipulation, even that proved to be doable.
It was a lot of fun, so much that we stopped at 3 in the night which rendered me half useless for today
It was easier than I thought. What I was surprised of, was that exposure times were in the 7-10 seconds range only, at f/16 (!) , for normal negative frames and 13x18cm paper. Probably because we sued the 6x7 enlarger with a huge column, i can imagine a strong 100watt halogen lamp helps for large film/large magnification to reduce times.
Anyway, we even used the color mixing head for some contrast manipulation, even that proved to be doable.
MartinP
Veteran
What a fun start to the week ! I recognise the idea with all the clothes-pegs , haha. Sounds like the lamp is efficient, which is very good when you go a bit bigger. There is a guide to what magenta and yellow colours will give what grade, on the Ilford site and probably lots of other places too (including in the packets of paper?).
oftheherd
Veteran
Is it possible to develop B&W prints in a Jobodrum 4550 tank ? How does that work, with some kind of agitation ? Just asking because I had to stop wet-printing because of the smell and possible splashes (especially from fixing solution) just before our son was born. (A baby-bath and open developer trays in the same small bath-room are no good solution ...)
What I can recommend from my small experience is a very good grain microscope (magnifier ?) to adjust focus.
I never tried it but used to read about making narrow trough like tanks that didn't hold so much chemical. You would hold both ends of the paper sort of doubled together, and emerse the entire sheet from one end to the other. Sounded quite doable. It was really for sheets about 3 to 5 feet or so, but you might try something like it if you can't find the drums or large trays, or just want to save on chemicals.
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