pentaxpete
Just found this Group -- I got into photography in 1951 after a School trip to the Festival of Britain and one of my Classmates showed me his Brownie Reflex Box Camera and told me he did his own processing at the School Photo-Soc in the Science Lab. So I went along and saw the room in half darkness, boys were going up to the Chemistry Master who was opening a box and giving them a sheet of blank white paper, which they took over to a bench where they had a small thing like a picture frame-- then they were putting the blank paper onto a 6x9 cms size negative, and clamping the 'frame' then go over to a light on a retort stand, hold it under the light, take the paper out of the frame on the bench, go to a sink and put the paper into some liquid when LO AND BEHOLD !! A ' Miraculous Event' took place --- the paper darkened and a PICTURE APPEARED!
Of course, the boys were doing 'contact prints' on Kodak 'Velox' paper and developing it in home-made developer made up by the Chemistry Master -- I was HOOKED !!! I rushed home on my bike and told my Mum and asked if she had a camera -- well, she HAD one -- a Kodak Brownie Hawkeye Box camera which I mended with brown paper and pins and cycled over 4 miles to a wonderful 'Emporium' called 'Marston & Heards' of Leytonstone, East London, where I bought some outdated ex-RAF WWII film for 6d (2.5 new pence) a roll .
I set up the bathroom -- put some Red Paper round the bulb ( as I had been told it was 'Ortho-Chromatic' and not sensitive to RED light), put up an old ex-Army blanket to the window and see-sawed the curly film through some home-made developer, stop made from some Vinegar in water and some Hypo solution and saw my first film -- grey images which I thought were the 'Bees-Knees' !!! 59 years later I still get the same feeling about B&W processing !!
Of course, the boys were doing 'contact prints' on Kodak 'Velox' paper and developing it in home-made developer made up by the Chemistry Master -- I was HOOKED !!! I rushed home on my bike and told my Mum and asked if she had a camera -- well, she HAD one -- a Kodak Brownie Hawkeye Box camera which I mended with brown paper and pins and cycled over 4 miles to a wonderful 'Emporium' called 'Marston & Heards' of Leytonstone, East London, where I bought some outdated ex-RAF WWII film for 6d (2.5 new pence) a roll .
I set up the bathroom -- put some Red Paper round the bulb ( as I had been told it was 'Ortho-Chromatic' and not sensitive to RED light), put up an old ex-Army blanket to the window and see-sawed the curly film through some home-made developer, stop made from some Vinegar in water and some Hypo solution and saw my first film -- grey images which I thought were the 'Bees-Knees' !!! 59 years later I still get the same feeling about B&W processing !!