I opened the iris on the camera, there was no IR. and yes if you have good exposure and know what settings work for your enlarger you can make a contact sheet at a preset setting, though with my students this is rarely the case.
I like the idea of using a test strip to figure out the proper exposure. It's tempting to skip this step to 'save paper' but you typically end up wasting more.
Were all of your papers safe using the IR light on your video camera?
I'm lazy.. I would have zapped my contact sheet at f5.6 for 2.5 seconds ;-)
That is such a cool dark room . The doors .
lovesailorable 2 months ago
how do you know what aperture size to set for the enlarger? anyone?
eeskaatt 3 months ago
That's an awesome door to the dark room
califunk2121 1 year ago
@califunk2121 I thought darkroom doors were like that one everywhere... now I feel lucky :)
demonomaniacooo 1 year ago
That's a kick ass door
I'm gonna do pinhole photography for my senior project but I'm thinking about using sheet film in the camera
Is there a different method for developing sheet film?
FreedumFries591 3 years ago
great series of videos.
tying to support by posting comments.
could you make a video about the chemistry for print making, kinds of and the pros and cons of said chemicals.
maybe a video of different kinds of paper and their uses.
support videos like this on youtube, theres really not enough on analogue photography (comment & subscribe yall)
manuelisai 3 years ago
I opened the iris on the camera, there was no IR. and yes if you have good exposure and know what settings work for your enlarger you can make a contact sheet at a preset setting, though with my students this is rarely the case.
alexczisny 3 years ago
I like the idea of using a test strip to figure out the proper exposure. It's tempting to skip this step to 'save paper' but you typically end up wasting more.
Were all of your papers safe using the IR light on your video camera?
I'm lazy.. I would have zapped my contact sheet at f5.6 for 2.5 seconds ;-)
luketrash 3 years ago