keenmaster486
Member
...I'm beginning my first foray into traditional optical printing!
I hate scanning and I'm already developing my own film so this is the logical next step for me.
(I'm 20 on the 6th, how about that! I don't suppose many college students are doing this sort of thing any more)
So of course since I'm me and not a normal person, I can't just buy paper and an enlarger and do it the usual way. (Also because I'm broke and lazy.) So I came up with a method that I'm going to try to refine just for the heck of it.
I should mention I have never done anything like this before and I have no idea what I'm doing, but I'm having a ton of fun.
"Enlarger": Old broken Retina Reflex III. The thing needs a CLA very badly and the viewfinder lens broke off. The lens is still in great shape though, and seems to work rather well. It appears very sharp. I have the thing mounted three paint cans high above my bathroom counter, and I'm using pieces of clear acrylic to hold the filmstrip in place.
Light source: High power LED flashlight
Safelight: Red-colored 40W bulb with outer half painted black
Paper: HP glossy photo paper. Intended for inkjet printing but we don't want that, do we? Nope. This stuff needs some AG Plus on it. I'm hand coating, which is something I have almost no experience with.
Developer: I'm all out of D-76 so Caffenol it is! I'm using the "Harmony" recipe: http://www.caffenol.org/2010/07/06/harmony-recipe/
Fixer: Kodak Hardening Fixer (bottle I mixed up about two years ago. Some precipitate floating around on top but I guess it might still be good)
I'm using some small bins as trays for the developer and fixer.
As a test, I took an old negative I'd developed earlier last year (kind of a boring picture if you ask me but that's ok) and went ahead with it.
For reference, here's the original photo scanned digitally:
Dead Link Removed
And here's my first attempt at a print, ever, in my life.
Exposure time was 20 seconds.
Developed and fixed for 5 minutes each.
Dead Link Removed
I'm quite excited.
So at first blush my thoughts are:
1. Overexposed?
2. Needs thinner coating?
3. More development time?
4. More fixing time?
So, thoughts, advice, etc, ladies and gentlemen?
I hate scanning and I'm already developing my own film so this is the logical next step for me.
(I'm 20 on the 6th, how about that! I don't suppose many college students are doing this sort of thing any more)
So of course since I'm me and not a normal person, I can't just buy paper and an enlarger and do it the usual way. (Also because I'm broke and lazy.) So I came up with a method that I'm going to try to refine just for the heck of it.
I should mention I have never done anything like this before and I have no idea what I'm doing, but I'm having a ton of fun.
"Enlarger": Old broken Retina Reflex III. The thing needs a CLA very badly and the viewfinder lens broke off. The lens is still in great shape though, and seems to work rather well. It appears very sharp. I have the thing mounted three paint cans high above my bathroom counter, and I'm using pieces of clear acrylic to hold the filmstrip in place.
Light source: High power LED flashlight
Safelight: Red-colored 40W bulb with outer half painted black
Paper: HP glossy photo paper. Intended for inkjet printing but we don't want that, do we? Nope. This stuff needs some AG Plus on it. I'm hand coating, which is something I have almost no experience with.
Developer: I'm all out of D-76 so Caffenol it is! I'm using the "Harmony" recipe: http://www.caffenol.org/2010/07/06/harmony-recipe/
Fixer: Kodak Hardening Fixer (bottle I mixed up about two years ago. Some precipitate floating around on top but I guess it might still be good)
I'm using some small bins as trays for the developer and fixer.
As a test, I took an old negative I'd developed earlier last year (kind of a boring picture if you ask me but that's ok) and went ahead with it.
For reference, here's the original photo scanned digitally:
Dead Link Removed
And here's my first attempt at a print, ever, in my life.
Exposure time was 20 seconds.
Developed and fixed for 5 minutes each.
Dead Link Removed
I'm quite excited.
So at first blush my thoughts are:
1. Overexposed?
2. Needs thinner coating?
3. More development time?
4. More fixing time?
So, thoughts, advice, etc, ladies and gentlemen?