Troy Hamon
Member
Whither the weather...
Now don't get me wrong, I love winter. I love going out for a run in the freezing cold wearing a facemask and ski goggles and looking like a refugee from a bank robbery gone bad, with my poodle trotting along next to me with his fuzzy face covered with frozen condensation (I'm sure my face looks like that too, though I can't see it...). I love taking out my camera gear and setting up while wearing more clothes than most of my relatives from the warmer parts of the earth would believe could be simultaneously donned, and finding a visual gem that only the adventurous will ever experience in real living color. I love nights that are so clear and dark that the entire sky looks alive with stars right in our front yard (meaning we don't have too much light pollution out here in the bush, at least not where my house is...). But what does all this have to do with darkroom construction?
Well...that is one thing that I am not so pleased with. I had grand plans of getting this darkroom construction project done by mid-October. Then after repeated delays I was hoping for early November. Then after further delays I was hoping for mid-November. And then the cold hit. We're not talking garden-variety cold, we're talking most nights below zero for a couple of weeks now. Thanksgiving day we had a record low of -27F (and yes, I went out for an 8 mile run with the dog, though it had warmed up to -23F when we started and was all the way to -14F by the time we finished...practically tropical). We did have a couple of warmer days, but of course they fell during my only trip away from home of the November/December period.
The situation is this. I am pretty much done inside the darkroom until I have the flooring installed. But the adhesive for linoleum won't work at these temperatures, when the floor is uninsulated. But it isn't really possible to insulate the floor at these temperatures, either. Perhaps you now see the problem. There are a few piddling things I can accomplish in the meantime. But not much. And I can't really use screws or nails in wood that is exposed to the cold because at these temperatures, it will just split the wood anyway. So what lessons have I learned from this experience? First, get your darkroom construction project done on time if at all possible. Second, if you have a plan to insulate your floor, do it right after your floor joists are put up, and before you have any floorboard put down. That's right, when you can work on the floor without being on your back below the building with limited work space, but can instead work from above with ample room. Why on earth didn't I think of that? Well, I did, but not in time. Hopefully it will prove helpful to another person building a darkroom...
In the meantime, I'm hoping for some +20F weather sooner rather than later so I can finish this project. Because I have a bunch of photographic projets that are pending film development and printing...wish me luck (or don't, up to you...but I'll pretend you do...).
Now don't get me wrong, I love winter. I love going out for a run in the freezing cold wearing a facemask and ski goggles and looking like a refugee from a bank robbery gone bad, with my poodle trotting along next to me with his fuzzy face covered with frozen condensation (I'm sure my face looks like that too, though I can't see it...). I love taking out my camera gear and setting up while wearing more clothes than most of my relatives from the warmer parts of the earth would believe could be simultaneously donned, and finding a visual gem that only the adventurous will ever experience in real living color. I love nights that are so clear and dark that the entire sky looks alive with stars right in our front yard (meaning we don't have too much light pollution out here in the bush, at least not where my house is...). But what does all this have to do with darkroom construction?
Well...that is one thing that I am not so pleased with. I had grand plans of getting this darkroom construction project done by mid-October. Then after repeated delays I was hoping for early November. Then after further delays I was hoping for mid-November. And then the cold hit. We're not talking garden-variety cold, we're talking most nights below zero for a couple of weeks now. Thanksgiving day we had a record low of -27F (and yes, I went out for an 8 mile run with the dog, though it had warmed up to -23F when we started and was all the way to -14F by the time we finished...practically tropical). We did have a couple of warmer days, but of course they fell during my only trip away from home of the November/December period.
The situation is this. I am pretty much done inside the darkroom until I have the flooring installed. But the adhesive for linoleum won't work at these temperatures, when the floor is uninsulated. But it isn't really possible to insulate the floor at these temperatures, either. Perhaps you now see the problem. There are a few piddling things I can accomplish in the meantime. But not much. And I can't really use screws or nails in wood that is exposed to the cold because at these temperatures, it will just split the wood anyway. So what lessons have I learned from this experience? First, get your darkroom construction project done on time if at all possible. Second, if you have a plan to insulate your floor, do it right after your floor joists are put up, and before you have any floorboard put down. That's right, when you can work on the floor without being on your back below the building with limited work space, but can instead work from above with ample room. Why on earth didn't I think of that? Well, I did, but not in time. Hopefully it will prove helpful to another person building a darkroom...
In the meantime, I'm hoping for some +20F weather sooner rather than later so I can finish this project. Because I have a bunch of photographic projets that are pending film development and printing...wish me luck (or don't, up to you...but I'll pretend you do...).