From my post #4 to this thread:
Also keep the wattage at or below the equivalent incandescent wattage light output recommended for the safelight filter you're using.
Fluorescents commonly state their equivalent light output in Watts relative to an incandescent bulb. Since the commonly specified incandescent safelight lamps are in the 7.5 to 15 Watt range, you'll need a much smaller wattage fluorescent lamp to get output that low. I've seen 3 Watt fluorescent lamps rated equal in output to a 20 Watt incandescent, and a 2 Watt fluorescent lamp rated equal to a 15 Watt incandescent output. The lowest wattage fluorescent on the Home Depot web site is a candelabra base 7 Watt fluorescent equivalent in output to a 40 Watt incandescent, way too bright for common safelight fixtures.
So you need a really low wattage fluorescent lamp to have low enough output for the more common safelight fixtures, and fluorescent wattages that low aren't very common. It's also probably a good idea to get a fluorescent rated at lower color temperatures, something in the 2700K range, so that you're not wasting the blue-green output of daylight fluorescent lamps, which won't make it through the safelight fixture.
I now use amber or red LEDs from superbrightleds.com myself. They supply 12VDC models in several configurations that I wire up to a variable output DC power supply, so I can switch to whatever output level I like. I've tested them with the materials I use, and they work fine when used sensibly. superbrightleds.com also sells 120VAC models in standard Edison bases that work, but you may need to filter them down or bounce them off a ceiling. The AC models don't dim properly with an AC dimmer because of internal electronics. The red and amber models from superbrightleds.com with lower output should also work well inside a traditional safelight fixture.
Put these
Dead Link Removed in amber or red in a safelight fixture or in an open reflector bounced off the ceiling and you'll be doing OK. Thats $4 / bulb + shipping.
Lee