twelvetone12
Member
I've been enjoying color printing lately and I'm slowly starting to have some good results. But it seems there is not much to read out there on color printing in the darkroom, and I'm not 100% sure I'm doing all the basics properly. I would like others to share their experiences to enlighten me a bit 
Right now I use Adox RA-4 chems in open trays at room temperature. I understand this is not the best setup possible, but I see no difference when doing it a 35 degrees (as per spec) in my jobo*. And for the purpose of testing it makes my life simpler.
My question is: how do you get a print correctly exposed? I can sort-of do that but it takes a huge quantity of paper/time:
1) I do a test strip at 80M/90Y on my color enlarger (with the filters on the BW enlarger it would be approximately 40M/40Y, is it normal to have such a discrepancy?), choose the exposure and do a print to evaluate
2) Then I start calibrating the color for the print, and do prints at the same exposure until I like the colors
3) at this point generally the exposure is not right anymore, so I do a couple prints until a nail that down
4) which in turn alters a bit the color balance, so I maybe do one or two more prints to get that to my liking and I finely adjust exposure time for the final print
Last day, for example, it took me 11 work prints to get to a decent final print.
Am I missing anything obvious here? Printing is fun, but I prefer not to use half a pack of paper just to make a print!
Lastly, all the prints I do seem very on the contrasty side - much more than the ones the lab makes. Is there a way to control that?
Thanks!!
* Actually using the print drum I always seem to get blue streaks. I tried a 35 degrees and room temp, pouring fast or slowly che chemicals, but at the end I got better results directly in trays.

Right now I use Adox RA-4 chems in open trays at room temperature. I understand this is not the best setup possible, but I see no difference when doing it a 35 degrees (as per spec) in my jobo*. And for the purpose of testing it makes my life simpler.
My question is: how do you get a print correctly exposed? I can sort-of do that but it takes a huge quantity of paper/time:
1) I do a test strip at 80M/90Y on my color enlarger (with the filters on the BW enlarger it would be approximately 40M/40Y, is it normal to have such a discrepancy?), choose the exposure and do a print to evaluate
2) Then I start calibrating the color for the print, and do prints at the same exposure until I like the colors
3) at this point generally the exposure is not right anymore, so I do a couple prints until a nail that down
4) which in turn alters a bit the color balance, so I maybe do one or two more prints to get that to my liking and I finely adjust exposure time for the final print
Last day, for example, it took me 11 work prints to get to a decent final print.
Am I missing anything obvious here? Printing is fun, but I prefer not to use half a pack of paper just to make a print!
Lastly, all the prints I do seem very on the contrasty side - much more than the ones the lab makes. Is there a way to control that?
Thanks!!
* Actually using the print drum I always seem to get blue streaks. I tried a 35 degrees and room temp, pouring fast or slowly che chemicals, but at the end I got better results directly in trays.