FilmIsCheap
Member
Hi folks,
I've searched the forums for this, but I didn't see any threads about this.
Short:
Do you know of any common rules used by "darkroom clubs?" Have you ever been a member of a public darkroom, and do you have any pitfalls to warn me about?
Long:
A local college has reached out to me to ask if I can teach them how to use a basic black and white darkroom. Long story short, nobody is teaching analogue photography, but they had a fairly robust photography club for several years where experienced club members would teach others how to use the darkroom. Then COVID happened, and there was a break in the system and they have about 40 students interested in learning how to process B&W film and nobody to teach them how.
I've seen the space and it definitely needs a good cleaning and some organization. Part of that is probably because of COVID (some prints were left hanging to dry, a negative or two was left in an enlarger), but some other things I would consider "not best practice" didn't seem related to COVID (one container for chemicals had been used for D76, fix, and stop bath--I keep my containers to one thing only in order to prevent cross-contamination, but that could just be me being paranoid; I also found working solution D76 mixed up and simply labeled D76, as if it were stock solution).
I'm going to teach the leaders of the club the basics of mixing chemistry, processing film, and printing. (They are apparently not interested in printing but just want to scan their B&W negatives and put them on the internet. I'm hoping once they're introduced to printing, at least a few of them will find it magical.)
They have club approval and funding, so chemistry, paper, and a few dozen rolls of film will be available to the students.
I'm thinking the club needs to come up with some basic rules that they agree to follow (where are chemicals stored, how are they labeled, how many parts water to Dektol is the club standard for printing, etc). I'm also not sure how they should share communal resources like paper, film, or cameras (they have SLRs and some of the cheap plastic 35 mm cameras from the 80s).
The last time I was in a shared darkroom was 1997 and we had to buy, keep, and bring our own film and paper, and follow whatever rules my high school teacher set.
Even though I'm not associated with this college or any of these students, I would love for the club to be successful. Does anyone have any rules, advice, or pitfalls I can talk about with the leaders as they decide how the club should be run? I know things will likely change over time, but I'm hoping I can help make this launching a smooth one.
Thanks for any advice you have.
I've searched the forums for this, but I didn't see any threads about this.
Short:
Do you know of any common rules used by "darkroom clubs?" Have you ever been a member of a public darkroom, and do you have any pitfalls to warn me about?
Long:
A local college has reached out to me to ask if I can teach them how to use a basic black and white darkroom. Long story short, nobody is teaching analogue photography, but they had a fairly robust photography club for several years where experienced club members would teach others how to use the darkroom. Then COVID happened, and there was a break in the system and they have about 40 students interested in learning how to process B&W film and nobody to teach them how.
I've seen the space and it definitely needs a good cleaning and some organization. Part of that is probably because of COVID (some prints were left hanging to dry, a negative or two was left in an enlarger), but some other things I would consider "not best practice" didn't seem related to COVID (one container for chemicals had been used for D76, fix, and stop bath--I keep my containers to one thing only in order to prevent cross-contamination, but that could just be me being paranoid; I also found working solution D76 mixed up and simply labeled D76, as if it were stock solution).
I'm going to teach the leaders of the club the basics of mixing chemistry, processing film, and printing. (They are apparently not interested in printing but just want to scan their B&W negatives and put them on the internet. I'm hoping once they're introduced to printing, at least a few of them will find it magical.)
They have club approval and funding, so chemistry, paper, and a few dozen rolls of film will be available to the students.
I'm thinking the club needs to come up with some basic rules that they agree to follow (where are chemicals stored, how are they labeled, how many parts water to Dektol is the club standard for printing, etc). I'm also not sure how they should share communal resources like paper, film, or cameras (they have SLRs and some of the cheap plastic 35 mm cameras from the 80s).
The last time I was in a shared darkroom was 1997 and we had to buy, keep, and bring our own film and paper, and follow whatever rules my high school teacher set.
Even though I'm not associated with this college or any of these students, I would love for the club to be successful. Does anyone have any rules, advice, or pitfalls I can talk about with the leaders as they decide how the club should be run? I know things will likely change over time, but I'm hoping I can help make this launching a smooth one.
Thanks for any advice you have.