newcan1
Member
I have a very basic 35mm enlarger that I plan to take home, that has a filter drawer. I have a full set of Calumet filters that I can use for color printing with this setup. (My principal darkroom is at another location).
In addition to the usual cyan, magenta, and yellow filters, the filter set also includes red, green, and blue.
With my dichroic enlarger, I recently did some color printing where the correct filtration was say 40Y, 50M.
If I want to use the minimum number of my Calumet filters to approximate this setting in the basic enlarger that I am taking home, would I use say 40R, 10M? In other words, does 40Y + 40M = 40R? Or is it 80R? I apologize for my ignorance; it seems intuitive that the answer would be 40R, but I don't have a reference that tells me what the result is of adding say magenta and yellow together, in terms of the amount of red.
Once I have my mind around this, I think it would be relatively easy to use these filters in lieu of a dichroic head. The plus to me is that I can then have a basic darkroom at home that I can use evenings, instead of the one that I have that is not at home.
In addition to the usual cyan, magenta, and yellow filters, the filter set also includes red, green, and blue.
With my dichroic enlarger, I recently did some color printing where the correct filtration was say 40Y, 50M.
If I want to use the minimum number of my Calumet filters to approximate this setting in the basic enlarger that I am taking home, would I use say 40R, 10M? In other words, does 40Y + 40M = 40R? Or is it 80R? I apologize for my ignorance; it seems intuitive that the answer would be 40R, but I don't have a reference that tells me what the result is of adding say magenta and yellow together, in terms of the amount of red.
Once I have my mind around this, I think it would be relatively easy to use these filters in lieu of a dichroic head. The plus to me is that I can then have a basic darkroom at home that I can use evenings, instead of the one that I have that is not at home.