Stupid darkroom tricks

.

A
.

  • 1
  • 1
  • 20
Kentmere 200 Film Test

A
Kentmere 200 Film Test

  • 3
  • 1
  • 61
Full Saill Dancer

A
Full Saill Dancer

  • 1
  • 0
  • 104
Elena touching the tree

A
Elena touching the tree

  • 6
  • 6
  • 188
Graveyard Angel

A
Graveyard Angel

  • 8
  • 4
  • 143

Forum statistics

Threads
197,774
Messages
2,764,059
Members
99,466
Latest member
GeraltofLARiver
Recent bookmarks
0

dphphoto

Member
Joined
Jan 1, 2004
Messages
349
Location
Knoxville, T
Format
Multi Format
I tray developed some 8X10 sheets the other day. I set out my trays, mixed down the developer, and had the film pre-soaking when I realized I hadn't poured out the fix! I found the bottle in the dark (don't ask me how) and got fix in tray, thus averting disaster.
I'm sure I'm not the only person to absent-mindedly do something completely stupid in the darkroom. Just wondering if anyone else is willing to share their stories? Dean
 

BruceN

Member
Joined
Aug 24, 2004
Messages
585
Location
Wyoming
Format
Multi Format
dphphoto said:
I tray developed some 8X10 sheets the other day. I set out my trays, mixed down the developer, and had the film pre-soaking when I realized I hadn't poured out the fix! I found the bottle in the dark (don't ask me how) and got fix in tray, thus averting disaster.
I'm sure I'm not the only person to absent-mindedly do something completely stupid in the darkroom. Just wondering if anyone else is willing to share their stories? Dean

Nope. Sorry. I'm afraid you're the only one.

:wink:

Bruce
 

rbarker

Member
Joined
Oct 31, 2004
Messages
2,218
Location
Rio Rancho,
Format
Multi Format
I always take a quick look around before I turn off the lights. That way, an image of the spacial relationships is stored in current memory, should I need it. Sometimes, in doing so, I'll even notice something I forgot to prepare.

A side benefit is that should I go blind from developing images of bare breasts (as discussed in the other thread), I'll always have that memory to cherish. :wink:
 

Bruce Osgood

Membership Council
Member
Joined
Sep 9, 2002
Messages
2,642
Location
Brooklyn, N.Y.
Format
Multi Format
Once, I put a test print into an empty developer tray, only once. I put the print back into the paper safe, turned on the light to find all the trays were empty. I'd set out the trays but neglected to put anything in them.
 

Woolliscroft

Member
Joined
Oct 22, 2004
Messages
726
Format
Multi Format
Long ago when I was a student, we had a dark room that almost no one ever used. A particular member of staff (now long dead) had an alcoholic wife who used to lurk in their. I once developed a film and found that the fix smelt odd. It tuned out she had replaced it in the bottle with gin! It does not make good fixer, trust me on this :smile:

David.
 

Donald Qualls

Subscriber
Joined
Jan 19, 2005
Messages
12,120
Location
North Carolina
Format
Multi Format
I'd guess replacing the gin with fixer didn't suit the drinker's needs very well, either...
 

Flotsam

Member
Joined
Sep 30, 2002
Messages
3,221
Location
S.E. New Yor
Once, I absent mindedly filled my fixer tray with permawash.
I couldn't understand why my test strips were changing tone in just a few minutes.
 

fhovie

Member
Joined
Mar 20, 2003
Messages
1,250
Location
Powell Wyoming
Format
Large Format
dphphoto said:
I tray developed some 8X10 sheets the other day. I set out my trays, mixed down the developer, and had the film pre-soaking when I realized I hadn't poured out the fix! I found the bottle in the dark (don't ask me how) and got fix in tray, thus averting disaster.
I'm sure I'm not the only person to absent-mindedly do something completely stupid in the darkroom. Just wondering if anyone else is willing to share their stories? Dean


I have only done this 3 times - fortunatly the bottle of fixer is stored right next to the tray. Now - I have built some tubes and am no longer be doing 8x10 film in trays.
 

Dave Starr

Member
Joined
Nov 7, 2004
Messages
110
Location
Flint, MI
Format
4x5 Format
Developing sheet film with Pyrocat-HD. Put part A in the developing tank and part B in the presoak tank. It didn't work very well. :smile:
 

nworth

Member
Joined
Aug 27, 2005
Messages
2,228
Location
Los Alamos,
Format
Multi Format
There is always the great favorite - I dropped the film on the floor. First, floors are dirty. Second, it isn't easy searching on hand and knee for fillm on a dark darkroom floor without doing damage to the film, stuff in the darkroom. Solution (and I wish I followed it consistently): handle film in some area that is (a) clean, (b) will catch and contain the film if you drop it, and (c) where you can find it. A 20X24 tray would do nicely, if you had one. Otherwise, a reasonably large, clear, flat area will avoid most problems.

Another stunt I have pulled from time to time is to leave the lights on in an adjacent room. My darkroom is not absolutely light-tight, and light from adjacent rooms can sneak in. But my darkroom is almost light-tight, so stray light is too dim to notice right after you turn off the darkroom lights. Solution: Turn off all the lights, including the safelights, and let your eyes adjust to the dark for a minute before you begin. Then look for leaks.
 

srs5694

Member
Joined
May 18, 2005
Messages
2,718
Location
Woonsocket,
Format
35mm
I once got a box of new paper (a brand I'd never used before, and only the third brand I'd ever used), pulled out the top sheet, exposed it, developed it, fixed it, and only then realized I'd pulled out a cardboard insert, not a regular sheet of photographic paper! I thought it seemed awfully thick for photo paper, and turned awfully mushy in the chemicals!
 

ggriffi

Member
Joined
Jul 7, 2004
Messages
261
Location
NW Indiana
Format
Multi Format
How about mine from just last night. I was looking but not seeing and I picked up what I thought the bottle of HCA after I was done with it and poured in it, only to realize that it was the developer, AFTER the next set of negatives were pulled out of the tank :mad:

g
 

BruceN

Member
Joined
Aug 24, 2004
Messages
585
Location
Wyoming
Format
Multi Format
OK, since we're on stupid - Played cards with the guys until about midnight. Couldn't sleep and for some reason (probably something to do with the amount of liquor in my system) decided to start printing. Made one 8x10 after the other, all completely max black. Finally quit after a dozen or so. I guess after that many drinks the whole safelight/white light thing is just beyond me... What I'm wondering now is how (or if) I even got the neg focused under the bright lights.
 

Dave Miller

Member
Joined
Dec 22, 2003
Messages
3,882
Location
Middle Engla
Format
Medium Format
You are not alone Bruce, I have a growing collection of beautiful black squares and rectangles, all set-off against stark white backgrounds. I intend mounting an exhibition of them one day, but must first seek advice on the type of toner to use to render them fully archival.
 

Mick Fagan

Subscriber
Joined
Sep 13, 2005
Messages
4,406
Location
Melbourne Au
Format
Multi Format
We changed our cordless telephone system about two months ago. It's a wonderful little thing and a bit like a mobile phone in it's functions and layout.

It's a panasonic digital thing which replaced the old Panasonic flip one which used to fit in my shirt pocket, provided I pushed the antenna in. All was going well and went to the darkroom to load film, last minute check before the lights went out, away I went.

Midway through loading, the phone rang and lit up like a Christmas tree, it did affect a few frames on the roll I was loading.

I now have the telephone in a secure and dark place in the darkroom. Would you believe that it now resides in the changing bag and that one can have a conversation through a changing bag!

Mick.
 

Woolliscroft

Member
Joined
Oct 22, 2004
Messages
726
Format
Multi Format
BruceN said:
OK, since we're on stupid - Played cards with the guys until about midnight. Couldn't sleep and for some reason (probably something to do with the amount of liquor in my system) decided to start printing. Made one 8x10 after the other, all completely max black. Finally quit after a dozen or so. I guess after that many drinks the whole safelight/white light thing is just beyond me... What I'm wondering now is how (or if) I even got the neg focused under the bright lights.

I have a sober variant on that theme. The first time I used Panalure I didn't know you were meant to turn the safe light off. Bye bye to most of a box of 8 x 10. Oops.

David.
 
OP
OP
dphphoto

dphphoto

Member
Joined
Jan 1, 2004
Messages
349
Location
Knoxville, T
Format
Multi Format
Thanks for all your responses. It's nice to know other people are human, too. I spent about a dozen years working in professional photo labs, as in-not Walgreens; you can imagine the stories I could have told. (How about the new hire, who's panicked reaction to anything that went wrong in the darkroom was to hit the lights. He didn't last the day.)
I posted a print of one of the surviving negs, "U. of Tenn. Arboretum 2," on the standard gallery. Dean
 

Blighty

Member
Joined
Oct 11, 2004
Messages
914
Location
Lancaster, N
Format
Multi Format
I've been in the situation where having calculated the perfect exposure, decided the correct grade, dodged, burned and flashed ad nauseum (in short trying to produce a perfect print), only to find I hadn't put any paper in the easel :mad: :mad:
 

Dan Henderson

Member
Joined
Feb 6, 2005
Messages
1,880
Location
Blue Ridge,
Format
4x5 Format
My stupidest trick was putting my 4x5 films in the tray, agitating them faithfully for 6 minutes, then just before taking them out realizing I had gotten lost in the dark and had been developing them in the stop bath tray. I rinsed them well, put them in the proper tray, and agitated another 6 minutes. Their stop bath "presoak" seemed to kill the contrast somewhat, but they were still printable.
 
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links.
To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here.

PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY:



Ilford ADOX Freestyle Photographic Stearman Press Weldon Color Lab Blue Moon Camera & Machine
Top Bottom