Success! My first good print.

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dcy

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May 9, 2025
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292
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New Mexico, USA
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I'd like to thank everyone for helping me along the way, from learning to develop better negatives to trouble-shooting in the darkroom. I am happy to report what I consider to be my first "good" print:

Setting aside questions of photographic talent, or whether the scene is interesting (I like it), I can at least say that I think this print was performed competently, at least on technical merit. I feel confident that the negative was developed correctly, and I managed to make a print that had no dust marks that I could see, no blemishes from contamination, had the highlights where I wanted them, the shadows where I wanted them, and the midtones where I wanted them.

Here's what I changed from yesterday:
  • Reduced the standard development time to 90 s.
  • Made a fresh batch of developer shortly before I started.
  • Added a pair of tongs to the final wash too in order to minimize contact between fingers and the unfinished print.
  • Diligently (obsessively?) washed and dried my glove-clad hands at the end of each print.
Final thoughts:

The shadows are not impressively dark, but I am using a budget RC paper (MultiTone Pearl) that is known to have a low Dmax. What matters to me is that I think the darkest spots on the image are close to the maximum dark that this paper + developer combo can deliver, and I managed to do that while also giving the highlights (sky and the grass at the bottom-left) the density I wanted, and the midtones (train cart) the density that I wanted.

I actually made many identical copies of the final print. I'm going to save them and use them to experiment with selenium and sepia toning, perhaps in a week or two.

2025-06-30_01-15-59.jpg

2025-06-30_01-16-40.jpg
 

cjbecker

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Dec 9, 2010
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IN
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It’s a good feeling, when it all comes together.

I have given up on trying to use my hands to develop the paper, it gave me way too many issues. Once I switched to using a set of Paterson tongs, printing was much simpler. One tong for the developer and stop. One for the fix and water bath.
 

Alex Benjamin

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Aug 8, 2018
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Montreal
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Looks great. Bravo!

Question: what contrast grade did you use?
 

GregY

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Apr 12, 2005
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3,198
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Alberta
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It’s a good feeling, when it all comes together.

I have given up on trying to use my hands to develop the paper, it gave me way too many issues. Once I switched to using a set of Paterson tongs, printing was much simpler. One tong for the developer and stop. One for the fix and water bath.

Congratulations on the print success. The same, I have a set of 3 stainless steel tongs from the old Zone VI catalog days....
 
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