jolefler
Established
Gray Fox said:I've recently thought about putting one in one of my bathrooms, but my house is on a septic tank sewerage system and I don't know if even relatively minor amounts of photo chemicals might kill the active bacteria in the system. Does anyone here know?
Purely a non-scientific answer, but my dad did B&W wedding photo printing for decades while dumping into his septic system with no adverse affects.
It's been said to me that the chemicals pretty well neutralize when combined and dumped down the drain.
Jo
Vics
Veteran
I'm exactly the same as Uncle Bill. I love printing since I got my M3 and Summicron 50. I too spend enough time at work on computer. I too have to share the darkroom with the laundry.
Vic
Vic
sepiareverb
genius and moron
jolefler said:Purely a non-scientific answer, but my dad did B&W wedding photo printing for decades while dumping into his septic system with no adverse affects.
It's been said to me that the chemicals pretty well neutralize when combined and dumped down the drain.
Jo
I'm more worried about what I might be doing to my well than to the septic tank.
David Goldfarb
Well-known
We moved to a new apartment a few months ago, and the dark/bathroom is just about ready. I've been processing film and loading filmholders, but I think I'll be able to start printing again this week. I have a 4x5" enlarger, and I contact print larger formats and process all my B&W film, and some E-6 once in a while.
When I was studying in Poland in 1989 I saw how people managed to set up darkrooms in tiny bathrooms and kitchens of small apartments while there were shortages of everything, let alone photographic supplies. I remember going to a photo supply shop one day and the clerk told me with enthusiasm, "we have fixer!" I figure if they could manage under those conditions, I can manage in my New York apartment.
I mix a lot of my own chemistry from bulk chemicals, so I don't worry too much about chemicals being discontinued. I do some alt-process work, so if there is no paper one day, I'll coat my own.
I don't own any kind of digital printer, but occasionally for color I'll send out for a drum scan and a LightJet or Chromira print.
When I was studying in Poland in 1989 I saw how people managed to set up darkrooms in tiny bathrooms and kitchens of small apartments while there were shortages of everything, let alone photographic supplies. I remember going to a photo supply shop one day and the clerk told me with enthusiasm, "we have fixer!" I figure if they could manage under those conditions, I can manage in my New York apartment.
I mix a lot of my own chemistry from bulk chemicals, so I don't worry too much about chemicals being discontinued. I do some alt-process work, so if there is no paper one day, I'll coat my own.
I don't own any kind of digital printer, but occasionally for color I'll send out for a drum scan and a LightJet or Chromira print.
feenej
Well-known
Haha. Yeah. Dropped that sucker. Also dropped a flash and broke it, a mono-light bulb, and a cameras or two, too. I'm starting to wonder if I should not drink and photograph.
vdonovan
Vince Donovan
I develop and wet print all of my film work, which is about 75% of the photos I take these days. I use a fantastic rental darkroom in San Francisco:
http://www.raykophoto.com
It's a nicer facility than I could maintain myself, with a broad spectrum of equipment available, including a massive enlarger that I used to make a 6'X3' mural print.
Like several other people have said, I enjoy hands-on darkroom work because I spend more than enough time in front of a computer for work.
http://www.raykophoto.com
It's a nicer facility than I could maintain myself, with a broad spectrum of equipment available, including a massive enlarger that I used to make a 6'X3' mural print.
Like several other people have said, I enjoy hands-on darkroom work because I spend more than enough time in front of a computer for work.
Jeff_S
Member
Wet Darkroom
Wet Darkroom
I use a wet darkroom to print black and white. I have a film scanner but really haven't been able to match the image quality I get with good RC and Fiber based paper.
Paper and chemicals are still readily available, Albuquerque or Santa Fe have several good photographic stores which so far still carry everything I need. Plus there is always B&H or Freestyle.
Jeff
Wet Darkroom
I use a wet darkroom to print black and white. I have a film scanner but really haven't been able to match the image quality I get with good RC and Fiber based paper.
Paper and chemicals are still readily available, Albuquerque or Santa Fe have several good photographic stores which so far still carry everything I need. Plus there is always B&H or Freestyle.
Jeff
Sisyphus
Sisyphus
Bill,
I still have a fully equipped darkroom in the single car garage. It takes up most of the space. I am able to buy paper and chemistry that I want, both locally and online, mostly through B&H since they have a larger selection of papers. I also order from Freestyle, and sometimes calumet.
I print about once a week. Sometimes I will call in sick on three of our day weekend and print two or three days. I am not really sure what I am going to do with all the prints though. My wife asks me what am I going to do with them, I merely shrug my shoulders, shut the door, and go back to printing.
I am mostly printing 8x10 proof prints. Once I am done I will print FB gallery type prints in different portfolio sizes.
S
PS Rayko is a great facility . . .
I still have a fully equipped darkroom in the single car garage. It takes up most of the space. I am able to buy paper and chemistry that I want, both locally and online, mostly through B&H since they have a larger selection of papers. I also order from Freestyle, and sometimes calumet.
I print about once a week. Sometimes I will call in sick on three of our day weekend and print two or three days. I am not really sure what I am going to do with all the prints though. My wife asks me what am I going to do with them, I merely shrug my shoulders, shut the door, and go back to printing.
I am mostly printing 8x10 proof prints. Once I am done I will print FB gallery type prints in different portfolio sizes.
S
PS Rayko is a great facility . . .
dadsm3
Well-known
Ditto here. But I only do it often enough to have to re-learn the whole process every time I do it. It's a special occasion for me, so challenging and very occasionally extremely rewarding.Uncle Bill said:I have been processing black and white film myself for a year and a half and been making traditional wet darkroom prints for about a year now. While a lot of people love the convience of scanning and printing with inkjet, I spend enough time in front of the computer with work and other projects. The Wet Darkroom (which moonlights as a furnace and laundry room) is my sanctuary during the winter.
Bill Pierce
Well-known
I have to make a confession. A terrible thing happened this afternoon while I was doing some office work. I took a break, scanned some old (1954) negs and knocked out some 13x19 prints. They were good prints; the old negs demanded some fairly extreme "printing." And Photoshop did the job. All the good intentions that this thread had built into me, the promise to get out those M7s and follow through with some silver prints, just disappeared. The dreams of quietly enjoying myself under the soft glow of an orange-red light disappeared. I am a sinner. Only my 8x10 view can drag me back to the lovely darkroom in the basement. And that's just to process the film. Forgive me; I have crossed the digital divide.
Bill
Bill
gumanow
Snapshooter
I guess you are forgiven Bill.
I went digital a few years ago and that was responsible for me getting back into the wonderful world of photography after more than several years away from it. My ex-wife, long story there, told me I sucked. I probably did suck at taking snaps of the kids as they were growing, but none the less, here I am.
I love the time that I have in the wet stuff, love the smell on my hands as I get into bed at 5am after printing all night, the feeling like I could go until the sun comes up... I love the time playing my tunes from when I was a teenager and remembering spending the time in the wet stuff then too... My dad and I spent time under the orange lamp from when I was 8 to when he died when I was 11. I remember him and honor what he taught me as well.
Also, I have a feeling of following in the master's footsteps. The Winogrands, Friedlanders, Adams, Westons, etc... they went through these steps, and now I am as well.
I work for a hi-tech startup and spend most of my time evangelizing technology. I want less of that in my hobby, my personal pursuit. And I love the surprise of pulling the negs out of the soup and seeing that I actually did take the shot and got that slice of life, and that I didn't screw up the development.
For me its wet all the way!
I went digital a few years ago and that was responsible for me getting back into the wonderful world of photography after more than several years away from it. My ex-wife, long story there, told me I sucked. I probably did suck at taking snaps of the kids as they were growing, but none the less, here I am.
I love the time that I have in the wet stuff, love the smell on my hands as I get into bed at 5am after printing all night, the feeling like I could go until the sun comes up... I love the time playing my tunes from when I was a teenager and remembering spending the time in the wet stuff then too... My dad and I spent time under the orange lamp from when I was 8 to when he died when I was 11. I remember him and honor what he taught me as well.
Also, I have a feeling of following in the master's footsteps. The Winogrands, Friedlanders, Adams, Westons, etc... they went through these steps, and now I am as well.
I work for a hi-tech startup and spend most of my time evangelizing technology. I want less of that in my hobby, my personal pursuit. And I love the surprise of pulling the negs out of the soup and seeing that I actually did take the shot and got that slice of life, and that I didn't screw up the development.
For me its wet all the way!
newsgrunt
Well-known
Do we need to head down to New york and have an intervention ?
I'm all for a road trip with a few stops at some fine camera shops along the way
I'm all for a road trip with a few stops at some fine camera shops along the way
Sjixxxy
Well-known
I got my own darkroom. I'll sometimes scan my negatives directly if I want to quickly proof one, or am preparing multiple rolls worth of photos from a family/friends gathering for quick web gallery use, but other then that most stuff goes though the wet process before seeing a scanner. I keep a nova slot processor covered & bagged, so I can can just walk in, print one RC print of something I want to see and be out with it drying in under 30 minutes.
One local photo store still keeps a large selection of chemicals & paper on hand. Still a wider selection & better prices online, but when I really need or want something without waiting four or more days for it to arrive, I'll just go there and pay slightly higher prices.
One local photo store still keeps a large selection of chemicals & paper on hand. Still a wider selection & better prices online, but when I really need or want something without waiting four or more days for it to arrive, I'll just go there and pay slightly higher prices.
Bill Pierce
Well-known
When I first came to NYC, two photographers were exceptionally gracious and kind to me. And both of them could really print. They were Gene Smith and David Vestal. Influenced by Gene, I would make these dramatic multiple filter vc prints that were heavily ferracyanided and overly melodramatic to say the least. Then David would point out there was so much bleach in the prints that he thought the highlights were continuing to brighten day by day. Gene was the master of drama. David, beautiful simplicity. Between the two of them, I sort of balanced out.
I am convinced that if he were alive today, Gene would be the master of Photoshop, damping down, but not eliminating, what was unimportant in the picture and highlighting what he though was important. David is printing in silver and inkjet. He sees inkjet as a way of producing limited editions of prints and even very limited numbers of books of prints. I am extremely proud to have some of his inkjet prints on my walls.
I guess what I am saying is that I miss the darkroom. I still keep it clean, supplied and ready to go. But realistically, I don't use it. But I have tried to make my computer area as private and personal as that room where you can turn out the lights and no one can interrupt you. I have a room. It has a computer, a printer, two scanners, a lot of big auxilliary hard drives and even more photo books. Everybody has learned it's just as dangerous to open the door of that room as it is to open the door to the darkroom.
I think the common enjoyment is that private space where you can concentrate on your images and whatever else without distraction and without interruption.
Bill
I am convinced that if he were alive today, Gene would be the master of Photoshop, damping down, but not eliminating, what was unimportant in the picture and highlighting what he though was important. David is printing in silver and inkjet. He sees inkjet as a way of producing limited editions of prints and even very limited numbers of books of prints. I am extremely proud to have some of his inkjet prints on my walls.
I guess what I am saying is that I miss the darkroom. I still keep it clean, supplied and ready to go. But realistically, I don't use it. But I have tried to make my computer area as private and personal as that room where you can turn out the lights and no one can interrupt you. I have a room. It has a computer, a printer, two scanners, a lot of big auxilliary hard drives and even more photo books. Everybody has learned it's just as dangerous to open the door of that room as it is to open the door to the darkroom.
I think the common enjoyment is that private space where you can concentrate on your images and whatever else without distraction and without interruption.
Bill
Bill Pierce
Well-known
Boy, did the remarks in that last post shut down the conversation. I apologize. I really am fond of the darkroom.
I got fairly messed up covering the civil war in Mozambique and for a couple of years had to find a way to earn a living that was a little more loosely scheduled and less physically demanding than news photography. I chose to be a free lance printer although I got offered some desk jobs. I had a good time even printing other people's pictures.
So don't let me put the damper on darkroom tales. I enjoy them too much. I started developing film and contact printing in a basement cubby hole using Kodak Tri-chem Packs (same chemicals for film and prints), graduated to a Sun-Ray enlarger and finally figured out you shouldn't use a red Christmas tree bulb as a safelight (even for ortho film). I was enjoying hearing what other folks did until I shut down the conversation with an inkjet diatribe.
Bill
I got fairly messed up covering the civil war in Mozambique and for a couple of years had to find a way to earn a living that was a little more loosely scheduled and less physically demanding than news photography. I chose to be a free lance printer although I got offered some desk jobs. I had a good time even printing other people's pictures.
So don't let me put the damper on darkroom tales. I enjoy them too much. I started developing film and contact printing in a basement cubby hole using Kodak Tri-chem Packs (same chemicals for film and prints), graduated to a Sun-Ray enlarger and finally figured out you shouldn't use a red Christmas tree bulb as a safelight (even for ortho film). I was enjoying hearing what other folks did until I shut down the conversation with an inkjet diatribe.
Bill
Thardy
Veteran
I have a darkroom. use using a MF enlarger to print 120 film. I bought a 4X5 enlarger a few months ago when i was sure I was going to buy a LF camera.
Paper and chemicals are no problem. I can print as large as 11x14....Nova processor limitations.
I get in there occasionally.
Paper and chemicals are no problem. I can print as large as 11x14....Nova processor limitations.
I get in there occasionally.
Last edited:
fotorr
Established
OK- I have all the necessary equipment-Zone VI timers,washers, enlarger, safelight,etc,etc. Today I set up an Epson 2400 printer. put in a scanned and retouched in PS digital file of a black and white negative and while drinking a "small" amount of red stuff the printer gaver me print. I'm a good printer-studied under Adams and Fishback and Tice amoung others. The Zone VI stuff up going up for sale- Epson wins.
Fotorr
Fotorr
Dogman
Veteran
I have a tiny darkroom adjacent to a small bathroom in our house. The darkroom is without running water so I load film in there and process it in the kitchen. I also rinse, tone, HCA and wash my prints in the kitchen because the bathroom is even smaller than my darkroom. I have to make arrangements with my wife in order to use the kitchen. It's not a perfect arrangement but it's doable.
I've scanned film and printed it but never enjoyed the process or thought the prints looked that good. Color inkjets were okay but black and whites were never satisfying. I now shoot with a DSLR when I want color and I print it with an inkjet but when I do something serious it's in black and white and it has to be done in the wet darkroom.
You asked about any difficulties obtaining materials. Not really. When I set up my first darkroom nearly 35 years ago, the local photo stores sold only Kodak and Agfa film and paper and mostly Kodak chemicals. Even though Agfa is no more and Kodak has ceased production of photo paper, there are more sources out there for me now than 35 years ago. I have the internet and I can get film, paper, chemistry and other materials for virtually anywhere in the world.
I'm almost out of my supply of Forte paper and it's no longer available. But I survived when Kodak stopped making Medalist and then Kodabromide and Agfa stopped making Portriga-Rapid. There still seems to be other alternatives available.
I've scanned film and printed it but never enjoyed the process or thought the prints looked that good. Color inkjets were okay but black and whites were never satisfying. I now shoot with a DSLR when I want color and I print it with an inkjet but when I do something serious it's in black and white and it has to be done in the wet darkroom.
You asked about any difficulties obtaining materials. Not really. When I set up my first darkroom nearly 35 years ago, the local photo stores sold only Kodak and Agfa film and paper and mostly Kodak chemicals. Even though Agfa is no more and Kodak has ceased production of photo paper, there are more sources out there for me now than 35 years ago. I have the internet and I can get film, paper, chemistry and other materials for virtually anywhere in the world.
I'm almost out of my supply of Forte paper and it's no longer available. But I survived when Kodak stopped making Medalist and then Kodabromide and Agfa stopped making Portriga-Rapid. There still seems to be other alternatives available.
Share:
-
This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.