The Utube video is pretty slow going, so I'll have to finish it later. But so far, it seems quite worthwhile, though from my own standpoint he does a number of things the hard way. It's hard to imagine that anyone in this day and age actually prints color with gel filters instead of a colorhead, or ever did professionally, but he does use overlapping filters in a valid instructional way. And I should point out that commercial labs, who take in a very wide range of tasks from various people using different kinds of film, often need to do things a certain way which an individual printing for himself does not. You can easily learn high-quality RA4 printing without a color densitometer. A black and white transmission densitometer is certainly helpful for masking, but not essential there either. I do recommend acquiring a calibrated little Stouffer step wedge so you can visually compare approximate densities, as well as a high quality color standard as a reference, namely, a McBeth Color Checker chart, which should be protected from light, heat, and humidity when not in use. If you do get serious about masking and need to frequently do it, then a film punch and register system would be your wisest investment.