Beginner darkroom questions... Tips and tricks welcome!

about to extinct

D
about to extinct

  • 2
  • 0
  • 95
Fantasyland!

D
Fantasyland!

  • 9
  • 2
  • 132
perfect cirkel

D
perfect cirkel

  • 2
  • 1
  • 130

Recent Classifieds

Forum statistics

Threads
198,750
Messages
2,780,367
Members
99,697
Latest member
Fedia
Recent bookmarks
6

awty

Subscriber
Joined
Jul 24, 2016
Messages
3,643
Location
Australia
Format
Multi Format
Great set up.
I use 1ltr plastic sauce bottles for the working solution. When Im finished with the chemicals or having a break I just pour the trays content back into the source bottle and squeeze out any air before putting the cap back on....cheap and effective in helping the chemicals last a little longer.
I also would recommend working to F stops when doing your exposures. Makes it a lot easier to get consistency. Just requires a little bit of mental arithmetic or just use the chart Dead Link Removed
Its easy once you get the hang of it.
I do a test strip using one stop intervals at say 4 secs, 8, 16, 32, 64. Then I work out whether I want to stop down or up the enlarger lens, then I do a series of 3rd stop exposures to fine tune exposure time and contrast. Work out my dodge and burns in stops or 3rd stops or 1/6ths or 1/4 or what ever.
Its a good idea to start doing this early so set your brain to work in f stops.
 

Svenedin

Member
Joined
Mar 19, 2016
Messages
1,191
Location
Surrey, United Kingdom
Format
Med. Format RF
Great set up.
I use 1ltr plastic sauce bottles for the working solution. When Im finished with the chemicals or having a break I just pour the trays content back into the source bottle and squeeze out any air before putting the cap back on....cheap and effective in helping the chemicals last a little longer.
I also would recommend working to F stops when doing your exposures. Makes it a lot easier to get consistency. Just requires a little bit of mental arithmetic or just use the chart Dead Link Removed
Its easy once you get the hang of it.
I do a test strip using one stop intervals at say 4 secs, 8, 16, 32, 64. Then I work out whether I want to stop down or up the enlarger lens, then I do a series of 3rd stop exposures to fine tune exposure time and contrast. Work out my dodge and burns in stops or 3rd stops or 1/6ths or 1/4 or what ever.
Its a good idea to start doing this early so set your brain to work in f stops.

+1. F stop printing is the only way that makes any sense. I always use it.
 

awty

Subscriber
Joined
Jul 24, 2016
Messages
3,643
Location
Australia
Format
Multi Format
+1. F stop printing is the only way that makes any sense. I always use it.
Yes!
but most of the tutorials seems to use the old 5 sec intervals, which is just silly. Took me a few sessions to retrain my brain to working in f stops and I only use an old analog timer with 10th/sec.
 

Fin

Member
Joined
Jan 25, 2017
Messages
139
Location
Derbyshire UK
Format
Multi Format
I do a test strip using one stop intervals at say 4 secs, 8, 16, 32, 64. Then I work out whether I want to stop down or up the enlarger lens, then I do a series of 3rd stop exposures to fine tune exposure time and contrast. Work out my dodge and burns in stops or 3rd stops or 1/6ths or 1/4 or what ever.
Its a good idea to start doing this early so set your brain to work in f stops.
Leading nicely on, a metronome (physical device or app, although that might not work if you are playing music off of your phone) clicking or beeping away at 60 BPM is very useful for counting test strip exposure times. Use the GraLab once you have determined the correct final exposure.

Talking about exposure, depending on the time of day, always try to view your test strips in natural daylight. It looks like you have quite a few trays, so put your washed test strip in one and examine it in real light.

Also, +1 for fresh chems!
 
OP
OP
saman13

saman13

Member
Joined
Mar 28, 2017
Messages
365
Location
Sarasota, Florida
Format
Multi Format
I just spent the last 3 hours cleaning up that enlarger. I took it all apart and am in the process of staining the baseboard. I scrubbed all the surfaces with a coarse brush and CLR while my girlfriend painted all the black surfaces after me with flat black paint (she wanted to, she rocks). I’ll have to put at least one more coat of stain on the baseboard but it’s all looking pretty sharp and much happier now. I’ll post a photo in a few days once everything is back together.

I think I have an idea how I’ll fix that crank as well.
 

Down Under

Member
Joined
Aug 22, 2006
Messages
1,086
Location
The universe
Format
Multi Format
Much much good advice here. May I share with you, a few tips learned from a lifetime in the darkroom - I made my first enlargements in October, 1962, and I'm still shooting and processing B&W and printing in my home darkroom.

Now and then I think about giving it away and scanning negatives for the rest of my life (and resist the impulse to puke), but the lure of mixing chemicals and printing under a safelight to the sound of good jazz always lures me back to the darkroom. Sure, scanning is easier, but printing is more fun.

Buy the best enlarger you can afford. I struggled for years with Meoptas and other such junk brands until I bought a Durst 66 which made very fine prints for twenty years. In the early 2000s I was given six unwanted enlargers, all amateur models,which didn't really suit me and were passed on or given to charity shops. The best of these was an LPL 5700, a very good enlarger but only for 35mm. I now have a Leitz lc with an Multigrade 500 head (cost A$695 in 1997) and an LPL 7700 with a B&W filter head and a big box of accessories (cost A$700 in 2003). These will do me for the rest of my darkroom time and someone I know will then get them. Good gear lasts a lifetime. You may be interested that the Leitz, a condenser enlarger, often produces prints too sharp and high contrasty for my liking. The LPL, a diffusion enlarger, is so much better. Leitz made a diffusion glass for the 1c.I have one, but I prefer the LPL for softer prints. these small points do matter. Critical thinking before you buy is crucial here.

Ditto for lenses. Don't go cheap. I did for many years and finally bit the bullet and bought three new Nikkors (50mm, 80mm,135mm), hich have served me well since. Of course people then started giving me enlarging Nikkors. I've passed them all on. One lives and learns.

A good timer will save you time and preserve your sanity. I have an old Italian timer I bought in the 1980s when prices in Australia were so much cheaper. It still works well and times everything to the precision I enjoy. Yes, I print for 7.6 seconds or 19.4 seconds. Don't we all?

Enlarging paper isn't cheap - at least good quality paper isn't. In the '90s and early '00s everyone was giving up their darkrooms and I bought up big - I now have a large fridge full of the stuff in my darkroom, also films, most of the paper is still good, even the Multigrade III from 1990 doesn't yet show any of fogging. Now and then some very old stock (1970s Kodak Polycontrast, Multigrade II) shows signs of fog and gets thrown out. My good luck. My message here, is that if I had to repeat all this again, I would just buy good paper in small lots, and use it up pronto.

After single weight glossy papers were discontinued I went to pearl papers and still use these. Matte papers I particularly dislike, it never gave the contrast I liked. Your choices may vary. The pearl finish covers up a multitude of sins on my negatives and I find I nowadays never have to spot or retouch the final prints.

If buying new paper, avoid buying small or unusual sizes. My one exception to this rule is Ilford's quarter plate (6.5 by 8.5 inch) Multigrade, a size I particularly like. Otherwise I cut 8x10 sheets into two 5x8s or four 4x5s. My standard give away print size is 4x5. Those boxes of precut 3.5 x 5 snapshot print paper aren't really bargains. Chop your own and save.

The darkroom fridge is the best investment I ever made, after a good enlarger. It's big enough to hold everything I use (paper, films, concentrated chemicals) and chill it all for a longer life.

Everyone I know does test strips before printing. Well and good, but if you use a full 8x10 sheet or even a 4x10 (half size 8x10), you are wasting an enormous amount of good (and expensive) paper. Ilford makes a small andin expensive gadget that produces five test strips on a 4x5 sheet. For most prints I make, a 2x5 sheet (half 4x5) with the tester set up in the right position on the easel, produces the results I need, with a little fine tuning. If I plan to repeat the prints in future, I mark the backs of the test sheets with data (mostly contrast details) after washing and drying them. Every few years I send out a box of old unwanted test strips for paper recyling, but oh well, at least I have them if I need them.

For darkroom chemistry the KISS (keep it simple, stupid) rule works well. I use home brewed D76 1+1 for almost all my work, occasionally Thornton's two bath, and now and then a 'specialised' developer which I mix myself using a $7 electronic scale bought on Ebay. Ditto D72 (grandaddy of Kodak Dektol) which I also home mix.

I now mix my chemicals one shot, and never store anything. False economy. Also less need for washing and storing empty bottles.

Whether or not to use stop bath isn't an issue for me. I bought a liter bottle of Kodak indicator stop bath in 1990 and I still haven't quite emptied it, altho' it has been topped up here and there with gifted stop bath concentrate. A second bottle, also one liter, awaits the day I finish the first. If I didn't have these, I would buy Ilford stop bath, use vinegar diluted slightly more than the recommended mix, or plain water. Many years ago I discussed the vinegar vs stop bath issue with one of Kodak's photo chemists and he told me, vinegar is just as good, and unlikely to damage prints. End of story for me.

Almost everything you need in darkroom basics can be bought super cheaply in your nearest Reject Shop. If you are one who needs the ego satisfaction of owning brand name gear, buy new (and pay through then ose) or look for used in charity and secondhand shops. Now and then retail photo shops discount unwanted darkroom supplies, but don't hold your breath, that mob is in business for profit, not to provide you with nice new things at discount prices. Think (and look) laterally.

Some nights in the darkroom everything I print turns out just fine. Other times, nothing works. After many years I learned to just give up, pour out the chems, and do something else. A glass of good wine half way thru a printing session, goes a long way to perk me up. One glass, no more. Or a good beer or a Tasmanian dry cider, the very best. Get out of the darkroom, pour that drink, and enjoy it in the garden or another room at home. Drinking in the darkroom is a no-no for me now ('tho I did for many years).

So much for summing up a lifetime in the dark. I intensely dislike scanning, but I can foresee a time when everything I shoot and process will be printed (and not just proofed) from my Plustek or Epson. Time passes, everything changes. Old dogs and new tricks.
 

Huub

Member
Joined
Dec 4, 2007
Messages
250
Format
4x5 Format
Loads of good advise already, but what seems to be missing is a set of multigrade filters. ;-) And with that condensor enlarger you will sure need those. Buy new ones, as they tend to fade or damaged.
 
Joined
May 9, 2013
Messages
87
Location
Brooklyn. NY
Format
Medium Format
RE: Stop bath; citric acid, sometimes sold as "sour salt" when sold for food purposes, makes a good stop bath and doesn't stink like acetic acid. Look up the formula for Kodak SB-8 stop bath.
 
OP
OP
saman13

saman13

Member
Joined
Mar 28, 2017
Messages
365
Location
Sarasota, Florida
Format
Multi Format
Much much good advice here. May I share with you, a few tips learned from a lifetime in the darkroom - I made my first enlargements in October, 1962, and I'm still shooting and processing B&W and printing in my home darkroom.

Now and then I think about giving it away and scanning negatives for the rest of my life (and resist the impulse to puke), but the lure of mixing chemicals and printing under a safelight to the sound of good jazz always lures me back to the darkroom. Sure, scanning is easier, but printing is more fun.

Buy the best enlarger you can afford. I struggled for years with Meoptas and other such junk brands until I bought a Durst 66 which made very fine prints for twenty years. In the early 2000s I was given six unwanted enlargers, all amateur models,which didn't really suit me and were passed on or given to charity shops. The best of these was an LPL 5700, a very good enlarger but only for 35mm. I now have a Leitz lc with an Multigrade 500 head (cost A$695 in 1997) and an LPL 7700 with a B&W filter head and a big box of accessories (cost A$700 in 2003). These will do me for the rest of my darkroom time and someone I know will then get them. Good gear lasts a lifetime. You may be interested that the Leitz, a condenser enlarger, often produces prints too sharp and high contrasty for my liking. The LPL, a diffusion enlarger, is so much better. Leitz made a diffusion glass for the 1c.I have one, but I prefer the LPL for softer prints. these small points do matter. Critical thinking before you buy is crucial here.

Ditto for lenses. Don't go cheap. I did for many years and finally bit the bullet and bought three new Nikkors (50mm, 80mm,135mm), hich have served me well since. Of course people then started giving me enlarging Nikkors. I've passed them all on. One lives and learns.

A good timer will save you time and preserve your sanity. I have an old Italian timer I bought in the 1980s when prices in Australia were so much cheaper. It still works well and times everything to the precision I enjoy. Yes, I print for 7.6 seconds or 19.4 seconds. Don't we all?

Enlarging paper isn't cheap - at least good quality paper isn't. In the '90s and early '00s everyone was giving up their darkrooms and I bought up big - I now have a large fridge full of the stuff in my darkroom, also films, most of the paper is still good, even the Multigrade III from 1990 doesn't yet show any of fogging. Now and then some very old stock (1970s Kodak Polycontrast, Multigrade II) shows signs of fog and gets thrown out. My good luck. My message here, is that if I had to repeat all this again, I would just buy good paper in small lots, and use it up pronto.

After single weight glossy papers were discontinued I went to pearl papers and still use these. Matte papers I particularly dislike, it never gave the contrast I liked. Your choices may vary. The pearl finish covers up a multitude of sins on my negatives and I find I nowadays never have to spot or retouch the final prints.

If buying new paper, avoid buying small or unusual sizes. My one exception to this rule is Ilford's quarter plate (6.5 by 8.5 inch) Multigrade, a size I particularly like. Otherwise I cut 8x10 sheets into two 5x8s or four 4x5s. My standard give away print size is 4x5. Those boxes of precut 3.5 x 5 snapshot print paper aren't really bargains. Chop your own and save.

The darkroom fridge is the best investment I ever made, after a good enlarger. It's big enough to hold everything I use (paper, films, concentrated chemicals) and chill it all for a longer life.

Everyone I know does test strips before printing. Well and good, but if you use a full 8x10 sheet or even a 4x10 (half size 8x10), you are wasting an enormous amount of good (and expensive) paper. Ilford makes a small andin expensive gadget that produces five test strips on a 4x5 sheet. For most prints I make, a 2x5 sheet (half 4x5) with the tester set up in the right position on the easel, produces the results I need, with a little fine tuning. If I plan to repeat the prints in future, I mark the backs of the test sheets with data (mostly contrast details) after washing and drying them. Every few years I send out a box of old unwanted test strips for paper recyling, but oh well, at least I have them if I need them.

For darkroom chemistry the KISS (keep it simple, stupid) rule works well. I use home brewed D76 1+1 for almost all my work, occasionally Thornton's two bath, and now and then a 'specialised' developer which I mix myself using a $7 electronic scale bought on Ebay. Ditto D72 (grandaddy of Kodak Dektol) which I also home mix.

I now mix my chemicals one shot, and never store anything. False economy. Also less need for washing and storing empty bottles.

Whether or not to use stop bath isn't an issue for me. I bought a liter bottle of Kodak indicator stop bath in 1990 and I still haven't quite emptied it, altho' it has been topped up here and there with gifted stop bath concentrate. A second bottle, also one liter, awaits the day I finish the first. If I didn't have these, I would buy Ilford stop bath, use vinegar diluted slightly more than the recommended mix, or plain water. Many years ago I discussed the vinegar vs stop bath issue with one of Kodak's photo chemists and he told me, vinegar is just as good, and unlikely to damage prints. End of story for me.

Almost everything you need in darkroom basics can be bought super cheaply in your nearest Reject Shop. If you are one who needs the ego satisfaction of owning brand name gear, buy new (and pay through then ose) or look for used in charity and secondhand shops. Now and then retail photo shops discount unwanted darkroom supplies, but don't hold your breath, that mob is in business for profit, not to provide you with nice new things at discount prices. Think (and look) laterally.

Some nights in the darkroom everything I print turns out just fine. Other times, nothing works. After many years I learned to just give up, pour out the chems, and do something else. A glass of good wine half way thru a printing session, goes a long way to perk me up. One glass, no more. Or a good beer or a Tasmanian dry cider, the very best. Get out of the darkroom, pour that drink, and enjoy it in the garden or another room at home. Drinking in the darkroom is a no-no for me now ('tho I did for many years).

So much for summing up a lifetime in the dark. I intensely dislike scanning, but I can foresee a time when everything I shoot and process will be printed (and not just proofed) from my Plustek or Epson. Time passes, everything changes. Old dogs and new tricks.
Thank you very much for all the helpful insight!

After it's homebrew refurbishment is done, I hope this robust enlarger lasts me for years and years. The main reason I wanted to repaint it was to cover up those rust spots to keep them from oxidizing again, especially if I will be in Florida for a while longer. Just because it didn't cost me much doesn't mean it won't do its job well! It came with the cheap Beslar 50mm (that looks pretty dirty on the inside) but I've ordered a Componon 80mm for MF that I suppose I could also use for 35mm. I'll pick up a Nikkor 50mm 2.8 eventually.

I'm hoping this Gralab timer will work for me for now. I have it, it works, so it's a good timer in my book.

I hear you loud and clear on the economic advantages of buying 8x10 paper and cutting it to size . However, I'm going to have to go against that in one case.... I'm really amused by the idea of getting the lford 4x6 postcards and printing my own postcards in the darkroom. I think that would be really fun for my first time having my own place and sending out holiday cards. So I see these in my near future...

That is good advice about printing the details on the back of a test strip. I hadn't thought about that.

Thanks for spending the time to help me out! I hope to be able to keep printing for as long as you have (do you think there will still be paper available in 2072?).
 
OP
OP
saman13

saman13

Member
Joined
Mar 28, 2017
Messages
365
Location
Sarasota, Florida
Format
Multi Format
Loads of good advise already, but what seems to be missing is a set of multigrade filters. ;-) And with that condensor enlarger you will sure need those. Buy new ones, as they tend to fade or damaged.
Bob over there already pointed that out to me and I just bought a set of Ilford Multigrades, new.

One vital thing I did forget is an easel... Kinda hard to print without one of those. Recommendations for good ones that are relatively inexpensive used? Any models or types to avoid? I was quite drawn to those "4 in 1" easels, but then I realized that the sizes they are don't really work for me. I plan on printing mostly 8x10, 4x6 and 4x5 so those easels only check one of those boxes (8x10). Oh! Plus square! I had completely forgotten that I shoot with a TLR... So those won't work.
 
OP
OP
saman13

saman13

Member
Joined
Mar 28, 2017
Messages
365
Location
Sarasota, Florida
Format
Multi Format
Great set up.
I use 1ltr plastic sauce bottles for the working solution. When Im finished with the chemicals or having a break I just pour the trays content back into the source bottle and squeeze out any air before putting the cap back on....cheap and effective in helping the chemicals last a little longer.
I also would recommend working to F stops when doing your exposures. Makes it a lot easier to get consistency. Just requires a little bit of mental arithmetic or just use the chart Dead Link Removed
Its easy once you get the hang of it.
I do a test strip using one stop intervals at say 4 secs, 8, 16, 32, 64. Then I work out whether I want to stop down or up the enlarger lens, then I do a series of 3rd stop exposures to fine tune exposure time and contrast. Work out my dodge and burns in stops or 3rd stops or 1/6ths or 1/4 or what ever.
Its a good idea to start doing this early so set your brain to work in f stops.
Again, good advice about using plastic bottles so you can squeeze the air out. Another thing I hadn't thought about doing. Y'all rock.
 

rrusso

Member
Joined
Jun 29, 2015
Messages
229
Location
Illinois
Format
Multi Format
Bob over there already pointed that out to me and I just bought a set of Ilford Multigrades, new.

One vital thing I did forget is an easel... Kinda hard to print without one of those. Recommendations for good ones that are relatively inexpensive used? Any models or types to avoid? I was quite drawn to those "4 in 1" easels, but then I realized that the sizes they are don't really work for me. I plan on printing mostly 8x10, 4x6 and 4x5 so those easels only check one of those boxes (8x10). Oh! Plus square! I had completely forgotten that I shoot with a TLR... So those won't work.


They'll work, you just won't get square images.

I have a Prinz 4 in 1 and a set of Speed Ezls from sizes 4x6 to 11x14; these are nice and quick, but you're stuck with a fairly narrow border. Not a huge deal if you're using RC, but if you want to use the tape method of drying for FB, I think it would be challenging.

I also have a Bogen adjustable easel which will do up to 16x20, very nice as you can choose how large you want the borders. I don't know how much it's worth, as I picked it up as part of a whole darkroom package deal from a local pro who was getting out of film.

I think the Saunders adjustable models are nice too, but I don't have experience with them.
 

MattKing

Moderator
Moderator
Joined
Apr 24, 2005
Messages
52,877
Location
Delta, BC Canada
Format
Medium Format
I've ordered a Componon 80mm for MF that I suppose I could also use for 35mm. I'll pick up a Nikkor 50mm 2.8 eventually.
Remind me - do you have a condensor setup for 6x6? Because the pictured condensor seems to at least be labelled as "35mm". You will find an that an 80mm lens will be frustrating with 35mm negatives, because the prints will be small.

I hear you loud and clear on the economic advantages of buying 8x10 paper and cutting it to size . However, I'm going to have to go against that in one case.... I'm really amused by the idea of getting the lford 4x6 postcards and printing my own postcards in the darkroom.
I cut three 4x6 sheets from each 8x10 sheet, leaving a handy 2"x4" scrap for tests. That makes postcards much more inexpensive to prepare.
Which brings up a suggestion - a good paper cutter/trimmer. You can get away with the inexpensive rotary ones sold to scrapbookers, but a better quality one will pay dividends for years. I bought a really nice 15" Rotatrim off of Craigslist for a good price, but it is quite large.
I've both a 12" guillotine cutter and a strange, Russian made 13.5" rotary cutter that I use regularly. Craigslist is your friend.

One vital thing I did forget is an easel... Kinda hard to print without one of those.
The two bladed 8"x10" easels tend to be easy to find used. They are okay..
An 11"x14" two bladed easel is functional, but not ideal.
The 4 bladed 11"x14"/14"x17" easels (Saunders are common) are great, but unless you get lucky on Craigslist, expensive.
There used to be lots and lots of choices. If you see something unusual on Craigslist, ask us.
 
Joined
May 9, 2013
Messages
87
Location
Brooklyn. NY
Format
Medium Format
Remind me - do you have a condensor setup for 6x6? Because the pictured condensor seems to at least be labelled as "35mm". You will find an that an 80mm lens will be frustrating with 35mm negatives, because the prints will be small.

The B-8 has a basic condenser set for 6 X 9 negatives. There are supplementary condensers for 6 X 6 and 35 mm, but the former isn't needed when using an 80 mm lens. Sam already has the supp. condenser for 35 mm.
 

MattKing

Moderator
Moderator
Joined
Apr 24, 2005
Messages
52,877
Location
Delta, BC Canada
Format
Medium Format
"The B-8 has a basic condenser set for 6 X 9 negatives. There are supplementary condensers for 6 X 6 and 35 mm, but the former isn't needed when using an 80 mm lens. Sam already has the supp. condenser for 35 mm."
I take it then that the 6x9 capable condenser set remains in place at all times, and will be present in the enlarger pictured above.
In other words, that tube with "35mm" written on it didn't replace the 6x9 condensers.
 
OP
OP
saman13

saman13

Member
Joined
Mar 28, 2017
Messages
365
Location
Sarasota, Florida
Format
Multi Format
"The B-8 has a basic condenser set for 6 X 9 negatives. There are supplementary condensers for 6 X 6 and 35 mm, but the former isn't needed when using an 80 mm lens. Sam already has the supp. condenser for 35 mm."
I take it then that the 6x9 capable condenser set remains in place at all times, and will be present in the enlarger pictured above.
In other words, that tube with "35mm" written on it didn't replace the 6x9 condensers.
The big 6x9 condensers are set up in the can that is labeled "35mm" and remain there at all times. There is a place for a supplementary condenser to be placed just below the lamp. The reason the can with the big condensers is labeled "35mm" is because the enlarger came from a university and was set up for 35mm (had the 35mm supplementary condenser), so the professor just found that as the most convenient place to label that the enlarger was set up for 35mm (I assume).

Bob let me know that an additional supplementary condenser made for 80mm lenses isn't actually needed, so I have everything I need. I'll just take out the 35mm supplementary condenser when printing with the longer lens.

You have probably already read this, but if not it's worth your while.
No, I haven't given that a read but I will now.
 
OP
OP
saman13

saman13

Member
Joined
Mar 28, 2017
Messages
365
Location
Sarasota, Florida
Format
Multi Format
Also, good news! I fixed the gear on the enlarger so I can now raise and lower it with the lever. So now everything is working as it should. Once the sealant I applied to the baseboard dries I'll be able to put it all back together and have a brand new 60 year old enlarger (I hope I look that good in 40 years).
 
OP
OP
saman13

saman13

Member
Joined
Mar 28, 2017
Messages
365
Location
Sarasota, Florida
Format
Multi Format
Reassembled! All the parts dried so I was able to get it back together and it looks a whole lot better. But, most importantly, it doesn’t shed rust whenever you touch it. The baseboard still looks pretty cut up (did they use it as a cutting board?) but after 3 layers of stain and 3 layers of polyurethane it is super smooth.
3FBAE3BA-AE7F-411E-9376-9E749B9A7D26.jpeg


I tried out that 50mm Beslar it came with and soft would be an understatement. There is all kinds of crud inside of it. The 80mm Componon (with the necessary lens cone) came yesterday and it performs a whole lot better. With the head all the way up it looks like I can print close to 8x10 with the 80mm and 35mm film so I don’t see any reason to replace the 50mm with a better one anytime soon. I can get along just fine with only the 80mm.
This thing looks a whole lot bigger in my bathroom than it did outside. It’s definitely not compact. But, I’m pretty happy to have my first enlarger. Now to find an easel... no one happens to have a spare one laying around, do they? Not a single one on Tampa Craigslist.
 

MattKing

Moderator
Moderator
Joined
Apr 24, 2005
Messages
52,877
Location
Delta, BC Canada
Format
Medium Format
Place a "want-to-buy" for an easel in the PHOTRIO classifieds :smile:.
 

Gerald C Koch

Member
Joined
Jul 12, 2010
Messages
8,131
Location
Southern USA
Format
Multi Format
I enjoy learning from books, they allow one to study at any speed, they cover the whole subject, they are accessible for immediate reference. One I can recommend is Horensteins Black & White Photography, available used for a few dollars.

PS photflo is good to have for rinsing film, one small bottle will last a lifetime. Hypoclear is optional for fiber paper and unnecessary for RC paper.

+1000

One nice thing about reading books is that you may find the answers to questions that you haven't thought to ask yet. Think about it.
 

Gerald C Koch

Member
Joined
Jul 12, 2010
Messages
8,131
Location
Southern USA
Format
Multi Format

MattKing

Moderator
Moderator
Joined
Apr 24, 2005
Messages
52,877
Location
Delta, BC Canada
Format
Medium Format
The three books together can often be found used at reasonable cost.
 
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links.
To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here.

PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY:



Ilford ADOX Freestyle Photographic Stearman Press Weldon Color Lab Blue Moon Camera & Machine
Top Bottom