Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2004/05/13
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I still have a darkroom. A Focomat 1C, a Focomat IIc, US military custom built with a point source head and a very dead electronic control panel. Cluttering up the office is a Valoy II and here and there are Focotar-2 lenses in various cabinets and drawers.? The Elcan enlarger ( Focomat IIc) has a Nikkor 63/2,8 on it, everything else Focotar II's. The analyzer is the Analyzer Pro from RH design in UK (paid for itself in less than a year). One 96" x 30" stainless steel sink and a deep (18") 30x30 stainless steel sink for washing. Water supply is filtered and on a 220/3 phase water heater. You dial in the temperature and it keeps it steady for however long you want to run it! I also have a large supply of Paterson tanks and reels (80+). For many years I used stainless reels, but the Paterson is more robust. Drop a stainless reel and even the slightest kink in the spiral will make it impossible to load them. Paterson reels bounce nicely. The 1500ml (5 reel tanks) also fits on my old colordrum base and is used for fixing. However much I like darkroom ? agitating film is somewhat boring. Of course, like everyone else I dont get in there often enough. One advantage with the onslaught of digital is that darkroom stuff is getting cheap, I also have an old Sony short-wave radio on a shelf, an original 8x10 Leica easel (the fancy one, 4 blades cast alloy base etc.) and the Saunders Pro for 11x14. As the space is small, (9x11 feet) I limit the size I print to maximum 11x14. Doing bigger prints would be possible ( I have done 20x24") but it is uncomfortable. Like most of us I did the kitchen, the bathroom and closet darkrooms for years. We lived in Paris for a year and I loaded the tanks in a small, very cramped toilet area, surrounded by militant Parisian cockroaches and then processed (Tri-X/D-76) in the bathtub! Yes, the digital darkroom has it's advantages, but staring at a computer screen is no substitute for leaning over the sink, watching that image coming up. It is still magic to me, even after 40+ years of doing it. Admittedly, spotting with a computer beats trying to get Spotone to limit it's wanderings on glossy paper. I went in there this week and knocked out 60 prints (8x10) from 55 different negatives in 8 hours. Not "masterprints" but good enough for reproduction purposes. The RH Analyzer pro gives you filter/time with almost perfect accuracy. It screws up with pyro souped film (could be recalibrated for it, if I could understand the manual) but otherwise it is great. Paper is mostly Ilford Multigrade IV (less than Can $400 for 1000 sheet packages) and the developer are home-made. I go through 400-500 rolls of Tri-X a year, so using outside processing would be too expensive and also to risky. Long live Gralab 300's ( and they do!). Tom A