I go to an art school about 30mins away. I pay 5€/hour and have to bring my own chemicals. The cool thing is that I sign a "contract" at the beginning of the school year with my chosen time and I get the whole darkroom to myself for 6 glorious hours every Monday![]()
It is, for now. For the past 4 years, there has obviously been just two of us using it. The other person is a gentleman that I've never met, but with whom I have exchanged post-its. For this reason, when September comes around and I contact them to sign up again, I'm afraid they'll say they have decided to close it down. So far, so good!That's perfect!
The most expensive part of a dark room here are the housing costs of the room it self. Second the energy cost.
There was an art center with a dark room I'd go to occasionally in Arizona, I think they charged $12/hr for use of the darkroom and their chemicals but had a bit cheaper rate if you were a paying member. They had a nice selection of equipment for alternative process, so it was a bit more than just a couple of enlargers and trays.
Around where I'm at now, there's a community dark room that charges $25 for the day. They are split between analog and digital, but have some large format enlargers which is nice.
The most expensive part of a dark room here are the housing costs of the room itself. Second the energy cost.
At the moment I am decommissioning my color dark room. The surplus equipment has no economical value to speak of. The best is to scrap it for parts. A Fermoneg negative stage has more value on ebay than a complete enlarger. I decided to keep the three 8 x10” enlargers for my black and white work and scrap the smaler ones. Yes, the future of optical printing concerns me too.
I use a (state) university darkroom which is conveniently located in my home town. Because I am over 62 years of age, I qualify for a program the university offers which allows me to take one class per semester without paying any tuition. I do, of course, pay for my film, paper, and chemisty, but the university has their own "store" where a very limited number of items can be purchased, usually at a competitive price.
But for all its shortcoming, San Francisco has the distinction of owning and operating a public darkrooom and photo center.
What do you$$pay?
Is it nearby or must you travel a ways?
Is it at a school or a community darkroom or 'art' center?
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