A lot of stuff in my small darkroom
I finally cleaned up enough to take the digi thing home from work this weekend and snap some pics of my darkroom facility. The darkroom proper is 5.5' wide by 8.5' deep. There is the typical dry and wet side.
The wet side at on end of the sink has a vent that gets sucked into the intake of the heat recovery ventilator for the house.
Under the sink there is a reverse osmosis filter that I scavanged from the trash in lieu of lugging distilled water home. There is also a nitrogen tank for gassing developer solutions to keep them from dying as quickly (stored dried food too). There is a roller base, used with RA-4 in drums. There is a magnetic mixer that I have built the guts of a coffe hot plate into as well.
Above the sink there is a Vivitar process timer that lets the mind safely wander when doing big lots of stuff. The copy holder on spring arm lets me get caught up on magazine reading backlog when doing c-41, or ra-4 colour work, when using this timer. Chems for colour work get tempered in the old cooler that is fitted withan immersion pump, fish tank heater, and thermocouple. The old plastics injection molding machine controller above the vivitar process timer runs the heater most effectively.
As you can see from the myriad of of little bottles, I mix my chemistry from scratch. Little kids means that buying a batch of chems, or even mixing up a gallon of D-76 does not make sense for me. I mix what I need a few days or in the morning ahead of time. I also make my own soaps, and pop flavours from the little essential oil bottles that I also store in this room, since the scale I use to weigh them is here too. The scale is an old run of the mill triple beam balance that I *bayed. Its upper range weight was missing, so there are little cups of screws that I hand fabriacted to allow me to weigh greater than 610g at one go. There is also a short length of wire that tares out on a dixie cup's worth of weight. For greater precision I also have a small 50g pan balance.
The sink holds 3 11x14 trays, with a larger fixer tray on a shelf at the top, just beside the exhaust inlet. I go dev, stop, up to the fix, under to the holdiong bath, and then do a big fix two/HCA/wash effort at the end of the session on all the prints that have accumulated when I print big FB in a session.
If I print larger than 11x14 in B&W I take over the adjacent laundry room. The clothes dryer and washer are leveled, and have boards that fit into their tops to place the trays on. The old microwave oven gets used to quick dry fibre test prints to evaluate dry down, as well as for soap making. The freezer actually has about half a load of food in it; the rest is of course film and paper. In the corner of one shot adjacent to the furnace you can see the filtered drying cabinet I built when I want to dry film, and also still keep working in the darkroom. The washer for 16x20 is an oversized tray and auto syphon print washer that sits on top of the freezer, and drains to the laundry tub. The archival slot washer usually sits in the darkroom sink if I am printing smaller than 11x14, and gets moved to the laundry tub for bigger jobs.
The dry side has a couple of Omega enlargers. The B600 condenser unit is mostly used to flash paper, and make contact prints under. The Dichroic diifusion unit does most of the exposing. It column has been moved to a shelf and roof mount to allow for larger print capabilities, and also to allow the use of a four bladed easel without having the column getting in the way. The timer for it is built into the Lici Colorstar analyser, which is a wonderful piece of kit. Somewhere on the wall there is a ferroresonant transformer that is used to feed the enlarger constant voltage. On the left hand side wall there are factory 35mm and 120 neg holders, and an assortment of matt board made holders for the more obscure film sizes. Even the spot above the door has been used to hang reels to dry. The cabinets under the bench are surplus from old drafting tables at my company. They are 36" deep, and hold a ton of stuff. The foot space has smaller cabinets that hold a camera macro bellows, and RA-4 drums, as well as sundry oil supplies for the soap efforts. The camera bags themselves get relegated to the hall beside the darkroom when I am printing.
Print finishing happens at my office - I usually mount at lunch the day after I print. I have my dry mount press and matt cutter there, as well as lots of room, a self healing cutting table,and big straight edge at my disposal.