Dusty Negative
Subscriber
Question: Is it normal that your enlarger does not render a perfect exposure from corner to corner?
Like many of you, I am a completely self-taught analog photographer and darkroom aficionado. I have only ever had one enlarger - it's an Omega B8. It has three condenser lenses - two are in the "main" condenser canister (I'm sure that's not what it's called, but it's the best I can do) while the third, smaller lens sits just under the lamp housing.
This enlarger has always exhibited vignetting or light falloff at the corners. Sometimes, for reasons I cannot yet understand, it is more prominent than at other times.
To try and rectify this, I have fiddled with the top condenser lens (take it out; leave it in; flip it upside down) and I have fiddled with the "canister" (loosening the screws and moving it around). The best combination I've ever found (top lens flat-side up, and canister all the way forward) renders a balanced illumination with about 1/10 stop falloff at each of the four corners. I've never been able to have perfectly equal light throughout the projected area (with the negative holder in). [I am using a light meter to take measurements].
Now, here where the story gets stranger. Even given the 1/10 falloff mentioned above, there's usually one corner that, when enlarging a print, renders close to pure white. This tends to happen in portrait orientation with 6x7 negatives.
I'm thinking there may be more than one thing going wrong here to cause this problem. With the even 1/10 falloff at each of the four corners, I don't think it makes sense to have one or two end up stops brighter at one or two of the corners. That must be something else, but I can't figure out what.
Anyone care to chime in with some thoughts? I've wondered if it could be the negative holder/carrier, but a visual inspection doesn't show anything obviously wrong, although I suppose it might be something I might not catch with my bare eye. The carrier doesn't look damaged.
Help. It's driving me crazy.
Like many of you, I am a completely self-taught analog photographer and darkroom aficionado. I have only ever had one enlarger - it's an Omega B8. It has three condenser lenses - two are in the "main" condenser canister (I'm sure that's not what it's called, but it's the best I can do) while the third, smaller lens sits just under the lamp housing.
This enlarger has always exhibited vignetting or light falloff at the corners. Sometimes, for reasons I cannot yet understand, it is more prominent than at other times.
To try and rectify this, I have fiddled with the top condenser lens (take it out; leave it in; flip it upside down) and I have fiddled with the "canister" (loosening the screws and moving it around). The best combination I've ever found (top lens flat-side up, and canister all the way forward) renders a balanced illumination with about 1/10 stop falloff at each of the four corners. I've never been able to have perfectly equal light throughout the projected area (with the negative holder in). [I am using a light meter to take measurements].
Now, here where the story gets stranger. Even given the 1/10 falloff mentioned above, there's usually one corner that, when enlarging a print, renders close to pure white. This tends to happen in portrait orientation with 6x7 negatives.
I'm thinking there may be more than one thing going wrong here to cause this problem. With the even 1/10 falloff at each of the four corners, I don't think it makes sense to have one or two end up stops brighter at one or two of the corners. That must be something else, but I can't figure out what.
Anyone care to chime in with some thoughts? I've wondered if it could be the negative holder/carrier, but a visual inspection doesn't show anything obviously wrong, although I suppose it might be something I might not catch with my bare eye. The carrier doesn't look damaged.
Help. It's driving me crazy.