The Darkroom Cookbook, 3rd Edition
Yes, Mark, the third edition of
The Darkroom Cookbook is on its way to the press. Thank you for mentioning it on APUG.
For this edition I asked other photographers, many of them APUG members, for personal contributions. These include Bruce Barnbaum, Rod Dresser, Jay Dusard, Patrick Gainer, Richard Garrod, Henry Gilpin, Gordon Hutchings, Sandy King, Les McLean, Saïd Nuseibeh, France Scully Osterman, Mark Osterman, Tim Rudman, Ryuijie, John Sexton, John Wimberly, and David Wood. Each has contributed some tip or technique on their area of expertise along with a representative photo.
The formulas were gone over with a fine tooth comb by Mark Booth of Washington, Paul Lewis of Canada, Ian Grant of the U.K. and Turkey, and Larry Hussar of Michigan. For example, in Kodak DK-15 I specified 5.5 grams of metol, they corrected it to be 5.7 grams! And thats just one example.
In addition, the chapter on toning was thoroughly gone through by Tim Rudman; the chapter on Printing Out Paper was almost entirely rewritten by the Ostermans; Patrick Gainer shared formulas and information on glycol/TEA; Sandy King helped with the pyrocatechin section; David Wood of .dr5 Chrome Lab worked with me on reversal processing and even provided variations of the formulas he uses; and there were a number of other contributions.
The new edition includes:
1. A chapter on reversal processing and enlarging negatives (
Shutterbug magazine has agreed to publish an excerpt on enlarging negatives in an upcoming issue).
2. Several new pyro formulas.
3. Updated information on pushing film.
4. Expanded chapter on pyro and pyrocatechin.
5. Expanded chapter on printing.
6. Expanded chapter on toning (thanks to Tim).
7. Expanded chapter on Salted Paper and Printing Out Paper, including the formula and technique for Collodio-Chloride Printing Out Paper, which hasnt been published for over 100 years. This was provided by Mark Osterman of the George Eastman House.
The real prize, for me, is new information on the Westons amidol formulas and a section about Brett and his working methods, including a rare photo of Brett with his 11x14 view camera, and two hand-written notes (reproduced) shared by Bretts close friend, photographer Richard Miller.
And yes, David, the
faux pas on sodium hydroxide was fixed. My sincerest apologies to all for letting that one slip past me in the heat (no pun intended) of editing the second Cookbook for which I take full responsibility. It is thanks to user groups such as APUG that those things get caught and people saved from potential harm.
As soon as I can I will post an excerpt or two on my web site. I'll letcha know when that occurs.
P.S., Arigram, does that answer your question . . . what's new?