George Collier
Subscriber
My viewing light is a 40w tungsten bulb in a recessed ceiling fixture (with a textured diffusion glass). When viewing, I take the print out of the fix, corner drain for a second or two, then place it on a piece of plexiglass, angled about 60˚ to me, at the back of the sink, against the wall, so when I stand about 3 - 4ft from the print at the other side of the sink, I am looking at the print at about 90˚ to the print surface, with no other lights on in the room, except the safe lights, which are too dim to effect the view. The viewing light is about 4 ft from the print, as the ceiling is low there. I move closer if I want to see closer, but the light doesn't change.
When I built the darkroom, I knew I would want this, so that one light is on its own wall switch, near that end of the sink.
The fix runs off fairly quickly, and the wet shiny print is what I see. I have found over time that this combination is perfect to compensate for dry down. Almost always Ilford Multigrade warm tone glossy.
When I built the darkroom, I knew I would want this, so that one light is on its own wall switch, near that end of the sink.
The fix runs off fairly quickly, and the wet shiny print is what I see. I have found over time that this combination is perfect to compensate for dry down. Almost always Ilford Multigrade warm tone glossy.

