Learn about prewetting the film for developing in this free photography video.
Expert: Jeff Park
Bio: Jeff Park has been a freelance commercial photographer since 1980. He has been the darkroom lab manager at Apertures Photo for the last nine years.
Filmmaker: Michael Hood
@josephgarza81 No one needs you bitching on a free video.
xHuntedGunzPCGx 7 months ago in playlist Developing Film in a Darkroom
Now, let's discuss josephgara81's spelling!
0rb0d 1 year ago
Good information. However, how would you calculate the time taken away from the normal time. Furthmore, you are a horable puplic speaker. You should have rehersed this before fumble fucking your way through it the way you did.
josephgarza81 1 year ago
Does anyone other than you and I care about this stuff anymore? What you think?
Malibucompany 1 year ago
Nice beard. makes me enjoy this video that much more. :-)
thecommercialedge 1 year ago
whats the reason for prewetting? i've always just put the developer in right away. is there some advantage to that method other than faster development time?
etatauri 2 years ago
Thanks a Lot for your Guides Great help.
Mrtetanos 3 years ago
There's really no need to use distilled water for pre-wetting unless you have REALLY bad tap water. However, it is a good idea to use distilled water for the developer and also for the final film rinse with PhotoFlo or a similar wetting agent.
ZoneIII 4 years ago