hoffy
Member
My darkroom is my laundry. During 'non-darkroom' times, it has to function as a fully working laundry, so it means I need to set up each time I use it. The only permanent changes I have made thus far is installing a weather strip around the inside door (& re-adjusting the latch). There is a glass sliding door to the outside world, which has a few sheets of MDF taped to the glass.
The problem I have mainly revolves around this glass sliding door. Every 6 months or so, I need to pull the MDF off and put new tape on, as it all starts to sag after a while and becomes progressively less opaque (I just use cheap plain black vinyl tape...next time I do have a roll of black cloth duct tape to try).
So, every time I want to use the darkroom during daylight hours, I have an hour long battle trying to patch light leaks.
I do have a list of things that I would like to do to rectify the situation:
(PS, we own the house and are not looking at moving for at least another 15 years, if ever)
OK, I'm curious to hear how permanent others have made their non-permanent darkrooms?
Cheers
The problem I have mainly revolves around this glass sliding door. Every 6 months or so, I need to pull the MDF off and put new tape on, as it all starts to sag after a while and becomes progressively less opaque (I just use cheap plain black vinyl tape...next time I do have a roll of black cloth duct tape to try).
So, every time I want to use the darkroom during daylight hours, I have an hour long battle trying to patch light leaks.
I do have a list of things that I would like to do to rectify the situation:
- instead of taping the MDF to the sliding glass door, make the pieces bigger and attach them to the aluminium frames - the thing going against this is screw holes, which doesn't thrill the wife - but hey, it's only the laundry, right?
- put a timber strip around the inside of the internal door, so it overlaps the frame - again, the missus is not to keen on me screwing things into the frame, but hey, its wood product and could be easily filled....
- make a plug to go under the door, instead of the towel that I currently stuff under there - actually, that's not a permanent fixture, so I should be good to go
- Split system Air con unit.....now I'm talking!!!
- Paint the walls around where the enlarger sits (on top of a chest freezer) black - OK, that will incur the wrath of 'er in doors, so maybe some MDF painted with blackboard paint and attached to the walls - holes can be filled, walls painted black will never be white again!
(PS, we own the house and are not looking at moving for at least another 15 years, if ever)
OK, I'm curious to hear how permanent others have made their non-permanent darkrooms?
Cheers