sterioma
Member
Hi everyone,
I need some tip for the following problem I am incurring into: my "darkroom" is set up in our smaller bathroom (luckily we have 2), and the setup is such that once I am ready to print, I have no way to open the bathroom door more than a few cm (so I am basically stuck in there for the whole session).
Beside one safelight, I have only another one light which is on top of the mirror, and unfortunately it is a pretty bright light. (There's another light on the ceiling, but I have no way to operate it from inside the bathroom)
I only print RC paper for now (just learning....), and I do usually wait for the print to be reasonably dry before evaluating it. I then leave my final prints to completely dry in my kitchen and go to sleep. More often than not, the prints I found in the morning are too dark, and lacking the contrast that I saw back in the darkroom. I guess my problem is related to the inspection light that is too bright.
Any hints? How do you people evaluate your prints in the darkroom? Do I have to guess how the print would look like under "normal" viewing conditions, or there are some other tricks I could use?
Thanks,
Stefano
I need some tip for the following problem I am incurring into: my "darkroom" is set up in our smaller bathroom (luckily we have 2), and the setup is such that once I am ready to print, I have no way to open the bathroom door more than a few cm (so I am basically stuck in there for the whole session).
Beside one safelight, I have only another one light which is on top of the mirror, and unfortunately it is a pretty bright light. (There's another light on the ceiling, but I have no way to operate it from inside the bathroom)
I only print RC paper for now (just learning....), and I do usually wait for the print to be reasonably dry before evaluating it. I then leave my final prints to completely dry in my kitchen and go to sleep. More often than not, the prints I found in the morning are too dark, and lacking the contrast that I saw back in the darkroom. I guess my problem is related to the inspection light that is too bright.
Any hints? How do you people evaluate your prints in the darkroom? Do I have to guess how the print would look like under "normal" viewing conditions, or there are some other tricks I could use?
Thanks,
Stefano