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- Aug 3, 2013
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i bought one of the Beseler 45MXT enlargers from my college a year ago when it abruptly closed. figured i could at least build a table for it and set up a folding table for trays and print on the enlarger i used in college 24 years after i graduated. i have the table built and the building bug bit me. i now have a 1/8th scale drawing of a framed and fully enclosed darkroom with an 8 foot sink and prepping to submit for a permit. lol. this thread is great! getting lots of ideas on how to problem solve the organization!
Getting close to finishing up the darkroom.
As long as you're at it, I would either paint the wall and ceiling adjacent to the enlarger black. Or put up some black cloth. All to minimize any stray light from the enlarger reflecting off the surfaces and affecting your prints.
Magnificent!!! I have 4 of these enlargers 2 setup and in use. What lightsource do you have. If you have a dichroic colorhead that has a delay in the lamp ask for help. I know how to cure it
Building darkrooms is a gas!
Is that a light booth? I use Pako belt dryers for fiber. Essential to my workflow.
It is a Nuarc N1000 Instant Mercury Printer. I got it free from a local print shop that changed over to digital. I am interested in trying various alternative photography processes, so I picked this up.
Rock on! You are set! One note on the print dryer. If sticking becomes an issue try hardener. Only time I have had a problem is after toning in a warm darkroom.
This is my darkroom in Helsinki, Finland. Red lamps are traditional bulbs except for the left one which is LED 2W. The enlarger is DeVere dichromat 8x10 from 1986
View attachment 416137

Great suggestion. I will do that.
This is my darkroom in Helsinki, Finland. Red lamps are traditional bulbs except for the left one which is LED 2W. The enlarger is DeVere dichromat 8x10 from 1986
View attachment 416137
This is my darkroom in Helsinki, Finland. Red lamps are traditional bulbs except for the left one which is LED 2W. The enlarger is DeVere dichromat 8x10 from 1986
View attachment 416137
I would encourage you to only black-out the barest of minimum you have to achieve your goals.
Why? Personally, after working in dark spaces for over 25 years professionally, I found a totally black dark room to be the perfect suicide machine. Very, very depressing in the long run; makes me want to avoid the space entirely. Of course, not everyone has this reaction, but be aware of the potential effects of TOO much dark space. Even in a darkroom, I have white walls with only the wall directly behind the enlarger painted black. The white walls are broken-up visually in the safe light by cabinets, shelves and timers, so there is some visual stimulation.
Just an opinion; your mileage may vary...
I would encourage you to only black-out the barest of minimum you have to achieve your goals.
As long as you're at it, I would either paint the wall and ceiling adjacent to the enlarger black. Or put up some black cloth. All to minimize any stray light from the enlarger reflecting off the surfaces and affecting your prints.
I guess it depends on the dust and humidity levels in the darkroom. I have no more dust problem with black plastic or cardboard than with a flat-painted surface. I wouldn't use a slick/shiny surface (paint, garbage bag, acrylic) as that kind of defeats the purpose of diminishing refections.I would recommend against black cloth or plastic in this application because they are dust attractors of the worst sort.
The better solution is flat black paint and then only around the immediate area of the enlarger.
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