darkroom: a light-tight room containing the equipment to develop photographs

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Darkroom: A light-tight room containing the equipment to develop photographs.

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Page 1: Darkroom: A light-tight room containing the equipment to develop photographs

Darkroom:

A light-tight room containing the equipment to develop

photographs.

Page 2: Darkroom: A light-tight room containing the equipment to develop photographs

Revolving Door:

The revolving door allows you to access the darkroom without

letting light in.

Page 3: Darkroom: A light-tight room containing the equipment to develop photographs

Amber Safelight:

Printing papers are sensitive to light so photographers use a

safelight, which is a low-watt bulb covered with an amber colored

filter.

Page 4: Darkroom: A light-tight room containing the equipment to develop photographs

Enlarger:

Literally makes enlargements – photographs that are larger than

your negative.

Page 5: Darkroom: A light-tight room containing the equipment to develop photographs

Enlarger components:

The Head: An adjustable mechanism houses the negative carrier and the enlarging lens which projects the negative image onto the printing paper. The head moves up and down along a rail that attaches to the baseboard.

Baseboard: A flat board, that is attached to the enlarger head, and sits on a table or counter.

Page 6: Darkroom: A light-tight room containing the equipment to develop photographs

Negative carrier:

The device that holds a strip of film negatives flat and in place within

the enlarger head.

Page 7: Darkroom: A light-tight room containing the equipment to develop photographs

Negative:When the natural lights and darks of an image

are reversed.

Photogram by Caroline Cogan, 2011

Page 8: Darkroom: A light-tight room containing the equipment to develop photographs

Positive:An image in which the lights and darks

appear as they do in nature.

Page 9: Darkroom: A light-tight room containing the equipment to develop photographs

Film Negative:

When you take a picture, the part of the film that receives light will turn black whereas the dark areas in the photograph will block the light

leaving the film clear. When you use your film in the darkroom, the film will correct the values and create a positive because the light will shine

through the clear areas turning them back to a dark value.

Page 10: Darkroom: A light-tight room containing the equipment to develop photographs

Filter Pack:

Filter packs contain filters ranging from 1-5 with .5 increments. For ex: 1, 1.5, 2, 2.5, etc.

If you have taken a properly exposed photograph you will use a 2.5 filter. If you need more contrast you will use filters 3-5. If you need less contrast you would use 1-2.

Page 11: Darkroom: A light-tight room containing the equipment to develop photographs

Printing Paper:

Consists of a shiny light sensitive emulsion coating on top of a base (support

material). We will be using RC paper but some photographers use a fiber based

paper.

RC papers gained their name because they have a coating on each side of the paper.

Page 12: Darkroom: A light-tight room containing the equipment to develop photographs

Surface:

Papers come with different paper types such as glossy, matte, semi-matte, satin, and pearl.

Page 13: Darkroom: A light-tight room containing the equipment to develop photographs

Easel:The easel goes under the enlarger and holds

your paper in place. The easel can also be adjusted so that you can alter the photograph’s size.

If you must turn on the enlarger light, place you paper in the paper safe: A light tight box that’s holds and allows easy access to unexposed printing paper.

Page 14: Darkroom: A light-tight room containing the equipment to develop photographs

Developer:Forms the image, turning exposed film into

negatives or the blank paper into a photograph. It does so by reacting with

the film’s/paper’s emulsion’s light-sensitive crystals and coverting them to black, metallic silver. The areas that the

most exposure to the light turn the darkest, whereas areas exposed less to

light will be lighter.

Page 15: Darkroom: A light-tight room containing the equipment to develop photographs

Stop Bath: The picture continues to

develop until it is neutralized by the stop bath. The stop bath STOPS the developing

process.

Page 16: Darkroom: A light-tight room containing the equipment to develop photographs

Fixer:The fixer clears away the paper’s unexposed and underdeveloped silver, allowing you to view the

photograph in the light. Without adequate fixer, the paper will

darken when the leftover silver is exposed to light.

Page 17: Darkroom: A light-tight room containing the equipment to develop photographs

Agitation:

Gently rocking of the tray or tank to expose the entire paper or film

evenly to the chemical.

Page 18: Darkroom: A light-tight room containing the equipment to develop photographs

Wash:

The wash consists of water and is used to wash off any remaining chemicals including the fixer. The paper must be left in the wash for the entire time or the paper will slowly be affected by light over time.

Page 19: Darkroom: A light-tight room containing the equipment to develop photographs

Print Squeegee:

The print squeegee removes the excess water from the photograph.

Page 20: Darkroom: A light-tight room containing the equipment to develop photographs

Print Dryer:The print dryer dries the photographic

paper. Only whole sheets may go through the dryer and you must be careful with necklaces, scarves, hair,

etc. which may be sucked into it.

Page 21: Darkroom: A light-tight room containing the equipment to develop photographs

Tones:Grays, black, and whites

Tonal Range:The variety of tones from light to dark

that make up an image. A strong photograph will have a wide tonal range

from white-white to black-black.

Page 22: Darkroom: A light-tight room containing the equipment to develop photographs

Contrast:The difference between the dark and lights in a photograph. A photograph with extreme lights and darks would

have strong contrast, however, a photograph should ALWAYS have

middle tones even if their proportion is minimal compared to the lights

and darks.

Page 23: Darkroom: A light-tight room containing the equipment to develop photographs

Print Dryer:

You can dry prints by with a print dryer or by air drying. Using a print dryer will yield the fastest results, however, you must have thoroughly washed your photograph so that it is free of chemicals before using the dryer.

Page 24: Darkroom: A light-tight room containing the equipment to develop photographs

Print Squegee:

A flat rubber blade or roller for squeezing excess water from a washed print for faster drying. The squeegee must be free of chemicals!

Page 25: Darkroom: A light-tight room containing the equipment to develop photographs

Emulsion:

The light sensitive coating on photographic paper which has silver halide crystals that react to light.