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This process appears to be complicated, but I think that
after you Prepare Solutions Mix up chemicals - developer, stop bath and fixer and pour into development trays - See Chemicals - Print for dilution rates and capacities. Compose Image And Focus Place your negative (emulsion side down - dull side) into the enlargers negative carrier, turn off the room lights and turn on the enlarger. This will project your negative onto the enlargers baseboard, or onto an easel, if you have one. If you have an easel, adjust it to accommodate the paper size you will be using - 8x10 for example.......some easels will allow you to set the borders 1/8th inch less than the paper size.......this gives you a nice white 1/8th inch border on your finished print.
Crank the enlargers body up or down to roughly format the image onto the easel (the part of the image that
you want to be your final composition - Note: you cannot print all of a 35mm
negative onto the 8x10 inch format
Turn off all lights except the safelight, otherwise you will have too much light with which to accurately focus the negative. Set the enlarger's lens aperture to either full open (brightest light) or a few stops from full open. All you need here is sufficiently bright light with which to focus without squinting. Now adjust the focus knob on the enlargers head to bring the image into sharp focus.......this can be done with the naked eye, or you can use a grain focusing aid if you have one (adjust the grain focuser until the grain "snaps" into focus). You may now have to readjust your image to fit the easel, and then refocus again, since changing the focus may have made the image too small to fill the easel. Lights Turn off the enlarger - room lights may be on at this point. Set The Enlargers Lens Aperture Set the enlarger lens in the range of f-5.6 to f-8 (or the middle of your lens f-stop range). The f-stop of the lens controls the amount of light that is projected onto the easel. The timer, controls how long that same amount of light is projected to the easel. Set The Timer As a starting point for an 8x10 exposure, set the timer that the enlarger is plugged into, for a 3 second exposure. If an 11x14 exposure, try 4 or 5 seconds as a starting point. Set The Filter Pack
If you are using variable contrast paper, then set the
acetate filter pack (thin acetate filters that slide into a drawer in the enlargers head, between the
light source and the negative) with a single 2.5 filter or a combination of filters that add up to 2.5.
Lights Turn off the enlarger and all room lights and make sure that the door is closed and locked. Your safelight can be on. Cut Test Strips Under safelight illumination, cut a sheet of undeveloped 8x10 paper into approximately, 8 - 1 inch strips. Place A Test Strip Onto The Easel Place shiny side up (emulsion side) and position diagonally across the easel, to ensure a broad sampling of the final image. Make Test Exposures
Press the timers start button and expose the test strip,
or a whole sheet of paper for 3 seconds. Now take a piece of cardboard, or something similar and cover
approximately 1/5th of the paper or strip. Expose the paper again for another 3 seconds. Move the cardboard
to now cover 2/5ths of the paper. Expose for another 3 seconds. Continue until you have done the last 5th of
the paper. What you have just made is a test print with a range of exposure of 3 seconds to 15 seconds.
Process The Test Now take the exposed paper out of the easel and carry it over to where you have the 3 trays of chemicals lined up.
I use 2 minutes for developing, but you may use anything from 1 1/2 min to 3 minutes. Once you decide on a length of development that you like, for consistency reasons adopt it as your default development time and use it almost exclusively.
Stop Bath - 10 Seconds -
Fixer - Place the paper face down into the Fixer solution and agitate slowly.
For a test strip, you don't have to wash the paper, just evaluate it while it is still in the fixer tray.
Note: Clearing agents are used to reduce washing times
of prints - not generally needed if you are using resin coated papers,
as the chemicals cannot soak into the paper as they would with fiber based papers. If you are short on
fresh water, then this is worth looking into as the clearing agent will cut your
washing times dramatically. Generally follow the manufacturers directions, or the times below.
Wash water should be approximately 68 degrees Fahrenheit.
Wash time if NOT using PermaWash or Hypo Clearing Agent
Wash water should be approximately 68 degrees Fahrenheit.
Dry The Print Remove and allow to air dry (in the case of a test print you don't really have to let it dry, as all you are trying to determine is a reasonable length of time with which to set the exposure for your final print). You may also squeegee the print in order to remove excess water from the surface and speed drying. Evaluate The Print Now that you have a test strip or print with exposure strips of 3, 6, 9, 12, and 15 seconds, choose the time that is closest to correct exposure, or if the test strips are all too light or too dark, select a new range of time, or adjust the lens aperture and do a second test print. The Final Print Expose a new sheet of paper for the time you have chosen and then process and dry as before. Again evaluate your print and add or subtract a small amount of exposure as necessary until you are satisfied with the final result. Fiber based prints are best dried in a print roll or on a print drier - this will minimize curling of the paper. Dry resin coated papers by placing them on a rack and they will air dry, curl free. Under no circumstances backward contaminate your processing solutions. Each tray should have its own set of rubber tongs, and they must stay in the proper trays. If you accidentally contaminate your developing solution with stop bath or fixer, pour the developer down the drain and mix up a new batch. I always label my tongs, so that I always begin my processing with them in the correct solution.
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