From my first Darkroom run

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Cholentpot

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From my first successful darkroom run. Shot on expired Tmax400 pushed to 800 developed in Tmax Dev. Shot on a Pentax ME Super with a 50 1.8 (I think)

Ilford VC RC Glossy 5x7, Ilford multigrade dev and rapid fix. I have an ancient Fotolarger 100DC with a Rodenstock 50 3.5

The photo looks far nicer in print than a scan. I'm still getting the hand of dodging and burning by hand. I have too many years of doing it by mouse.
 

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Sirius Glass

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Great!!
 
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Cholentpot

Cholentpot

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Be proud. Be very proud...

Thanks! I am!

This was not my best print. I have better ones that I'd rather not post online.

I bought a box of 5x7 as an after-thought and used 22 of the 25 and only made 1 8x10 print. I ended up using the 8x10s for test strips and contact sheets. I guess the 5x7 is more practical and looks nice to my eyes for 35mm that's past its prime.
 

M Carter

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Awesome, and welcome to the fixey-fingers club!

Two books that can really up your game -

"Way Beyond Monochrome", the basics, plus split-filter printing, lots of info on exposing, developing and testing film, from beginner to crazy advanced. The one book that's kind of do-it-all for al things B&W;

A used copy of Tim Rudman's "Master Printing Course" - just the freaking bomb for going insanely next-level with printing, much of it very simple, plenty of info on toning, bleaching, etc. Seriously a must-have once you feel you have the basics going on. Packed with great ideas and techniques, but Tim's a master printer, chemist, an teacher.
 
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Wonderful work! Keep at it.
 

HiHoSilver

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Bravo!! 'Hope I can do so well.
 
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Cholentpot

Cholentpot

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Awesome, and welcome to the fixey-fingers club!

Two books that can really up your game -

"Way Beyond Monochrome", the basics, plus split-filter printing, lots of info on exposing, developing and testing film, from beginner to crazy advanced. The one book that's kind of do-it-all for al things B&W;

A used copy of Tim Rudman's "Master Printing Course" - just the freaking bomb for going insanely next-level with printing, much of it very simple, plenty of info on toning, bleaching, etc. Seriously a must-have once you feel you have the basics going on. Packed with great ideas and techniques, but Tim's a master printer, chemist, an teacher.
Wonderful work! Keep at it.
Bravo!! 'Hope I can do so well.

Thanks! The prints look even better than the negative scans I've done. I'll give it to beginners luck. I misread the sheet info and only washed for about 30 seconds, I wonder how these will hold up. Maybe I should re-wash...

I have a few really good books that I've been reading to help with the prints. The 35mm Photographers Handbook by Julian Calder and John Garrett and Beginner's Guide to Darkroom Techniques by Ralph Hattersley along with an awesome Time Life series I found in the trash.
 
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Cholentpot

Cholentpot

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Congrats! And isn't it just cool to hold it in your hand and really feel, "I made this."

Really nothing like it. It make a great little gift for the inlaws and parents. I have bragging rights too, my older bro is a major photoshop guy. Does ads and stuff. I told him I'm photoshopping, by hand.
 

Sirius Glass

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Tell your bother that he works a the pixel level but you work at the molecular level. It is his problem that he has limited abilities.
 

Sirius Glass

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He also hates vinegar, so there's no getting him near a darkroom.

Simple solution, pun very much intended, use stop bath with indicator and there will be no vinegar smell. So that is a real wimpy excuse from him.
 

480sparky

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Know it, you do.

I loaded up my ancient TLR with a piece of paper. No clue on the ISO or anything. Gonna take it for a spin and see what happens.

Are contact prints off a print a thing?

I think I used something like ISO 12 for shooting with paper.
 

tezzasmall

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I think I used something like ISO 12 for shooting with paper.

Most people quote ISO 3 being the right figure for paper negs etc. so you might find the negs slightly underexposed.

Also from further back on the posts: 'I misread the sheet info and only washed for about 30 seconds, I wonder how these will hold up. Maybe I should re-wash...'

A quick wash is fine for quickness of RC prints and if you don't expect to keep the print in A1 condition forever, but I think the rule manufactures give out is about 4 - 5 minutes at 5 degrees C and above in gently moving water, although at the other end not too hot - probably around the same for film dev at about 20C / room temperature is best. So if you want to keep the print, another wash would do no harm.

NOTE: just thought, I am presuming you are using RC paper as FB requires a lot L O N G E R wash and is another answer all together! :smile:

Terry S
 
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Cholentpot

Cholentpot

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Most people quote ISO 3 being the right figure for paper negs etc. so you might find the negs slightly underexposed.

Also from further back on the posts: 'I misread the sheet info and only washed for about 30 seconds, I wonder how these will hold up. Maybe I should re-wash...'

A quick wash is fine for quickness of RC prints and if you don't expect to keep the print in A1 condition forever, but I think the rule manufactures give out is about 4 - 5 minutes at 5 degrees C and above in gently moving water, although at the other end not too hot - probably around the same for film dev at about 20C / room temperature is best. So if you want to keep the print, another wash would do no harm.

NOTE: just thought, I am presuming you are using RC paper as FB requires a lot L O N G E R wash and is another answer all together! :smile:

Terry S

It's RC paper. I decided not to jump in the deep end and left the FB alone for now.

ISO 3 for glossy RC paper, I'll give that a whirl.
 

480sparky

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Most people quote ISO 3 being the right figure for paper negs etc. so you might find the negs slightly underexposed............

Entirely possible. All I remember is my meter at the time didn't go down to the ISO that was suggested. Maybe I was using the meter's lowest, 12, then calculating the 'proper' exposure from there.
 
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