Darkroom Lamp

Darkroom Lamp

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Kodak Safelight Model A Photography Darkroom Lamp w OC Filter F
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Antique Kodak Kerosene Dark Room Lamp
Antique Kodak Kerosene Dark Room Lamp
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Vintage Kodak Brownie darkroom Lamp Kit Model B 6D6
Vintage Kodak Brownie darkroom Lamp Kit Model B 6D6
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VINTAGE 1950’s KODAK SAFELIGHT LAMP MODEL A DARK ROOM SERIES OC AMBER FILTER
VINTAGE 1950’s KODAK SAFELIGHT LAMP MODEL A DARK ROOM SERIES OC AMBER FILTER
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SIMMON OMEGA OMEGALITE B DARKROOM ENLARGER COLD LIGHT LAMP HEAD No 7224 WORKING
SIMMON OMEGA OMEGALITE B DARKROOM ENLARGER COLD LIGHT LAMP HEAD No 7224 WORKING
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Yankee Safelamp safelight darkroom safelite light lamp INV527
Yankee Safelamp safelight darkroom safelite light lamp INV527
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GE PHOTO FLOOD LAMP DXT DARKROOM
GE PHOTO FLOOD LAMP DXT DARKROOM
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Kodak Model A Bullet Safelight Lamp Dental Darkroom X Ray Safe Light 120v
Kodak Model A Bullet Safelight Lamp Dental Darkroom X Ray Safe Light 120v
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Vintage Thomas Scoponet Enlarging Magnifier 20 Power PLUS Dark Room Lamp
Vintage Thomas Scoponet Enlarging Magnifier 20 Power PLUS Dark Room Lamp
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Polaroid lamp cap darkroom photo equipment replacement
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Antique Premier Combination Lamp No 1 Darkroom Kerosene Lamp Light photography
Antique Premier Combination Lamp No 1 Darkroom Kerosene Lamp Light photography
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BROWNIE DARKROOM MODEL B LAMP KIT SET ANSCO A 6 YELLOW GREEN SAFELIGHT FILTER
BROWNIE DARKROOM MODEL B LAMP KIT SET ANSCO A 6 YELLOW GREEN SAFELIGHT FILTER
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VTG Eastman Kodak Dark Room Brownie SafeLight Lamp Red 10 Watts 110 240 Volts
VTG Eastman Kodak Dark Room Brownie SafeLight Lamp Red 10 Watts 110 240 Volts
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Kodak Brownie Darkroom Lamp Model B Made in NY
Kodak Brownie Darkroom Lamp Model B Made in NY
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Antique Kodak Brownie Dark Room Lamp Paper Cone Series 2 Paper Safelight
Antique Kodak Brownie Dark Room Lamp Paper Cone Series 2 Paper Safelight
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Really Early Brownie Darkroom Lamp Safelight Model B Works
Really Early Brownie Darkroom Lamp Safelight Model B Works
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PH213 Darkroom Enlarger Lamp 250w 125v 1001269
PH213 Darkroom Enlarger Lamp 250w 125v 1001269
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Antique Kodak Kerosene Dark Room Lamp ca 1900 1905
Antique Kodak Kerosene Dark Room Lamp ca 1900 1905
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ISE TRI LAMP for Dark Room New w Box Instructions and four lamps
ISE TRI LAMP for Dark Room New w Box Instructions and four lamps
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Kodak Brownie Darkroom Lamp Kit Model B Two Cups
Kodak Brownie Darkroom Lamp Kit Model B Two Cups
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KODAK SAFELIGHT w FILTER DARKROOM BEEHIVE BULLET LAMP LIGHT
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Brownie Darkroom Lamp Kit Complete
Brownie Darkroom Lamp Kit Complete
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VINTAGE BROWNIE DARKROOM LAMP KIT MODEL C CAT 111 9981 WITH 2 CUPS
VINTAGE BROWNIE DARKROOM LAMP KIT MODEL C CAT 111 9981 WITH 2 CUPS
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Vintage Superb Boxed Condition Paterson DARKROOM LAMP SAFE LIGHT
Vintage Superb Boxed Condition Paterson DARKROOM LAMP SAFE LIGHT
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STAR SCHEIN DARKROOM LAMP not in original box
STAR SCHEIN DARKROOM LAMP not in original box
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Vintage EASTMAN KODAK MODEL A DARK ROOM LAMP CAN LIGHT 10 Watts Complete Works
Vintage EASTMAN KODAK MODEL A DARK ROOM LAMP CAN LIGHT 10 Watts Complete Works
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lot of 9 Wiko Photo Lamp Projection Bulbs 82V 200W Darkroom
lot of 9 Wiko Photo Lamp Projection Bulbs 82V 200W Darkroom
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Brownie Darkroom Lamp Kit Model B 2 Cups
Brownie Darkroom Lamp Kit Model B 2 Cups
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Vintage Antique Conco 1 Dark room lantern finger oil lamp kerosene tin metal
Vintage Antique Conco 1 Dark room lantern finger oil lamp kerosene tin metal
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VINTAGE PHOTO AGfA ANSCO DARKROOM KIT LAMP TRAYS GLASS PRINT FRAME MQ PAPER BOOK
VINTAGE PHOTO AGfA ANSCO DARKROOM KIT LAMP TRAYS GLASS PRINT FRAME MQ PAPER BOOK
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734 KODAK SAFELIGHT LAMP MODEL A DARK ROOM SERIES 1A FILTER RED
734 KODAK SAFELIGHT LAMP MODEL A DARK ROOM SERIES 1A FILTER RED
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ANTIQUE TIN DARKROOM OIL LAMP PHOTOGRAPHIC RUBY GLASS
ANTIQUE TIN DARKROOM OIL LAMP PHOTOGRAPHIC RUBY GLASS
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VTG EASTMAN KODAK BOWNIE SAFELIGHT LAMP MODEL C WRATTEN DARK ROOM PHOTOGRAPHY
VTG EASTMAN KODAK BOWNIE SAFELIGHT LAMP MODEL C WRATTEN DARK ROOM PHOTOGRAPHY
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VINTAGE KODAK DARKROOM LIGHT EASTMAN KODAK BROWNIE SAFELIGHT 1918 LAMP 110 240V
VINTAGE KODAK DARKROOM LIGHT EASTMAN KODAK BROWNIE SAFELIGHT 1918 LAMP 110 240V
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Rare Lancasters The Rubralux darkroom lamp Patent No 1365
Rare Lancasters The Rubralux darkroom lamp Patent No 1365
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VINTAGE KODAK BROWNIE DARKROOM LAMP KIT MODEL B WITH TWO CUPS
VINTAGE KODAK BROWNIE DARKROOM LAMP KIT MODEL B WITH TWO CUPS
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BROWNIE DARKROOM LAMP KIT MODEL B
BROWNIE DARKROOM LAMP KIT MODEL B
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KODAK Brownie Vintage Darkroom lamp Kit Model B Eastman Kodak Co USA
KODAK Brownie Vintage Darkroom lamp Kit Model B Eastman Kodak Co USA
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Antique Vintage Photography Dark Room Lamp Lantern Kerosene
Antique Vintage Photography Dark Room Lamp Lantern Kerosene
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Two Vintage Mid Century 1960s Kodak Darkroom Safety Lights Retro Lamp Desk Lamp
Two Vintage Mid Century 1960s Kodak Darkroom Safety Lights Retro Lamp Desk Lamp
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Vintage Paterson Darkroom Lamp
Vintage Paterson Darkroom Lamp
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ANTIQUE UNIVERSAL No 2 KEROSENE LIGHT LAMP MINING SIGNAL PHOTOGAPHER DARK ROOM
ANTIQUE UNIVERSAL No 2 KEROSENE LIGHT LAMP MINING SIGNAL PHOTOGAPHER DARK ROOM
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Darkroom Lamp

Printing For Profit in Platinum From Digital Negatives - The Concise Guide - Part 5/7

Part 5/7 - The digital negative.

Introduction.

When people involved in alternative processes started printing with digital negatives, at first I totally ignored the new 'trend', being then focused on sensitometry tests, densitometers, pyro staining and so on. Although learning all that has proved to be extremely useful in the computer age too, working digitally gives us more consistency and better results in less time (plus other advantages). I now print from digital files only (except old work of course), directly from a digital cameras. Ditching heavy view cameras altogether (of which I was an avid user for many years) has also improved dramatically the quality of my work and made easier to capture the images that I want, when I want. When I have to print an old image (I have a large archive of 8x10" in-camera negatives) I generally contact print from the original negative, unless it is an important image, which I feel I will be printing again in the future. In that case I prefer to scan it (I use a Microtek full bed scanner) and prepare a digital negative anyway.

I do not care whether working traditionally, or digitally, or both. I am interested in producing the best possible, long lasting images and to me, a mix of digital and traditional is what works.

That said, let see how to produce a digital negative that can compete with a traditional one. First, the raw file has to be good. If you shoot digitally, this means a top-notch digital camera (i.e. a full frame sensor Canon Eos 5d would be the very minimum), or if you scan traditional negatives, a good quality scanner and software. I use Vuescan in 16bit mode. If the file from your digital camera or scanned negative does not have the resolution required to produce a good negative, and you really want to make the print, I would recommend to blow it up with specialist software, such as onOne Genuine Fractals PrintPro (Benvista Photozoom Pro is also good). Keep in mind that of course this is a compromise, yet I have managed to produce good prints from relatively small files. Many of my customers do not own ultra professional digital cameras or scanners and often supply me with medium if not low resolution files. Speaking of software useful for working with digital files, I would like to mention Alien Skin's Exposure. This neat Photoshop plug-in "emulates" the look of many traditional films (HP5, Tri-X etc.), includes complete control on grain and also has a nice channel mixer to convert to B&W, plus many other features. I am the first to admit that moving from traditional film to digital and then using a filter to emulate... film may seem absurd, but as said at the end of the day the results count. I do not think one needs to invest in more software to do a good job, although Viveza 2 (NIK Software), is terrific for localized contrast tweaking (and the new Structure slider is worth the purchase of this filter alone).

The last "software" of course is your own skill to use Photoshop to make your images look great. This goes well beyond the scope of this article, just keep in mind that you need an image with at the very least a good histogram (without gaps between sample values) and plenty of details in the shadows (I feel to say this because almost always, when I get digital files from my customers, the shadows are too thin). Here is an old little Photoshop trick to give your images more "presence" in the mid tones and shadows. Load a picture. Duplicate the layer. Gaussian blur the new layer until it is out of focus (not too much e.g. about 10/15 pixels for an 8x10" 400dpi image). Double click the blurred layer to get the Layer Style window. Select Blend Mode: Multiply. Opacity around 60% (you will play with this setting later). Go to the first of the two grey gradient lines at the bottom of the window. Alt-click (on a PC, I do not know on a Mac) the left white pointer to detach it from the right one and slide it to the left, to your taste. Now slide a bit to the left the other white pointer too keeping an eye on the highlights. What we are doing here is having the blurred image multiplied on the background layer in the mid tones and shadows only. Now click OK and in the layers window you can play around that 60% Opacity that we set earlier. Slide around it to see the difference. Use this technique with the greatest moderation because of course we are introducing some blurring in the image.

Two last things about working digitally, before we talk about the platinum curves. First, with digital negatives we have the opportunity to improve the original image, with cropping, dodging, burning and so on, but we can also enhance it a bit with some special effects. I would recommend, however, to use special digital techniques carefully and with moderation, i.e. without making drastic changes to the original image. After all, we are working with an almost two centuries old process which certainly deserves all our respect!

Second thing, in platinum you can print everything, not necessarily photographs. For example, because of its extraordinary permanency, I have often being asked to print even important documents. Or you can print painting reproductions, completely computer generated landscapes such as those made with Vue or Terragen and so on. Endless possibilities and fun.

Photoshop and curves.

You need to make a step wedge. In Photoshop, create a new image 4x5" at 360 dpi (this resolution is the recommended resolution to print all our digital files). Marking six columns and nine rows will create 54 squares. Number them from 00, 02, 04... to...98, 100 (you will leave three squares unused). Then fill each square with black in the respective density, i.e. 0% (white), 2% (very light grey) up to full black (100%). Please check with the eyedropper in Photoshop that the numbers truly reflect the indicated density, then, invert and flip the image. Now insert a sheet of 8,5x11" Pictorico OHP in your printer to print the wedge. Make a new larger Letter size image same resolution as the wedge and paste the wedge in the top left corner as a new layer, so not to print it in the dead center of the Pictorico sheet, this way you will save some space for further tests.

For years the printer I used to print my negatives was an Epson R1800 with ultrachrome inks, so your settings may vary depending on the printer you have, but if you use any Epson with ultrachrome inks they should be very similar to mine. I have recently switched to an Epson Stylus Pro 3880 without any change in my curve. With Epson printers and Windows Vista, this is the procedure: choose Edit/Color settings and notice the settings. In my case Gray gamma is 2.2, please note that if you make your test with a gamma and then change it in the future it will make a difference. Click File/Print with Preview and make sure that your settings match mine, in particular Color Management > Print > Document > Profile Gray Gamma 2.2 (every time that you print a negative check that this setting is the same that you used when printing the wedge). To print Pictorico I am using the Epson profile PhotoRPM for Premium Glossy paper (download your Epson profiles if you do not have them yet). Note: some people print digital negatives with a color cast (i.e. orange, brown etc.) to take advantage of the actinic qualities of UV light, i.e. to obtain more density. This to me is NOT necessary and only complicates things just the same as developing negatives in Pyro.

Click OK and in the Epson panel make sure that everything matches, i.e. Premium photo paper glossy, Photo RPM quality, etc. If you do not use an Epson, try the best photo quality settings on glossy paper for your printer. Also make sure that the color management is obviously ICM. After printing the first wedge you can duplicate the layer, shift it to another quadrant in the Letter size image, delete the first layer which you have already printed, and re-insert the same sheet of film in order to print the wedge again changing the printer settings, for example I have different glossy paper profiles in my computer and I have tested them all with different setting such as Photo, PhotoRPM etc. Our goal is to obtain the maximum density your printer is capable of. If you have a densitometer and a calibrated wedge you can check the density. In my case, printing pure black on Pictorico gives me the same density as wedge #14 on my 21-step calibrated Stouffer wedge. Step#14 is a 2.00 density which is plenty. If you do not own a densitometer you can make a quick visual test: in normal lighting conditions, lay down the wedge on some black text written on the back of a Pictorico envelope, you should not be able to see the text at all under squares # 00-10, and very faintly through square #12.

After printing the same wedge - if you want - up to four times (of course you should take note of the settings maybe writing them down on the Pictorico sheet itself with a marker) we are going to coat some paper and make our first print.

If you have built your UV unit similar to mine, your printing time should be around 4 minutes. Coat the paper with pure palladium and one drop of 2.5% Na2 and expose the sheet for this time (as said earlier if you want to standardize your printing with one drop of 5% Na2 you can, just do it now and do not change it anymore). Develop, clear, wash and dry and you are ready to assess your first "print". The procedure is quite straightforward: notice on the print the first square that is not pure white and write down its number, the same for the first one which is not pure black. These are our limits when preparing out images, or in Zone system terms, these are your Zone IX and I. These two zones as said are the limits but please keep in mind that you have to shift the zones one stop to get useful details in the print (e.g. Zone VIII and Zone II, the lightest and the darkest zones in the texture range). To easily find these zones, I usually cut a corner from the print and punch two holes, one in the black brush strokes and the other in the clear paper. I then pass over the squares to compare the densities. Please do this in normal lighting conditions, not under a strong light to see better.

In my case, and hopefully in a similar way in your tests, I got Zone IX = ~8/9% and Zone I=~78% with a 4 minutes exposure. Why I am happy with these results. Because I have several pure white and pure black squares above and below this range, which means that my time is correct as well as my contrast. If you do not, for example if the 0% square is not white but slightly darker than the paper outside the brushed area it means (assuming that the print has cleared well) that your time is too long (or there is a problem printing your negative i.e. not enough density). Conversely, if none of your blackest squares are not as black as the brushed borders your time is too short. Especially with pure palladium the brush strokes should be real black, like ink. Lower the light panel if they are not. If you have built the exposure unit as suggested, you can raise or lower the light panel to correct the timing, being careful to stay around four minutes (remember that if you double the distance, the light received will be four times less). Only one stop more is already eight minutes, two stops are 16 and so on, and this is not convenient when printing for business. Conversely keeping the UV tubes too close to the paper would give unpractical short times (for dodging etc.) and probably would show light stripes from the tubes on the print.

I would stick to this test in pure palladium for now. Of course, should you decide to go for a classic 50/50 solution with platinum, for example, you will have to repeat the test with this mixture (same thing if you plan to print with different papers).

Now back to Photoshop to create your own printing curve. Load your favourite grey scale image, a landscape, a portrait etc. with good tonality, plenty of detail in shadows and highlight, like my lake in the next page for example. Go over the image with the eyedropper, for example on shadows where you still want good details. Photoshop will probably indicate a value of 80% or more. But by checking the printed wedge you can see that 80% will print almost pure black, so this value needs to be tweaked. Likewise pass over well detailed highlights, the reading will be too low, such as 30%, while you know that your Zone VII is around 10%. So the next thing to do is to apply a curve to the image to match the palladium curve in the darkroom. Create a new Curve Adjustment Layer. Basically as a starting point you just grab the central part of the curve, which of course is a flat line (from top right, shadows, to bottom left, highlights) to start with, and pull to the right, adding control points to keep it smooth. Keep the Curves window open and click over the same highlights as before and notice the two values in the Curves window, Input and Output. As you can see the 30% reading has now become probably a 15%, similar change has happened with the shadows.

The curve will resemble a sort of an S (do not move the control points at the two vertices). The curve is obviously only a starting point. To tweak your own curve you just keep an eye on the wedge and another on the image, and slightly shift the points on the curve to match the wedge. Basically if, for example, you have a photo of a beach and the sand falls on Zone V, you can first check you reference (the printed wedge) and see that, let's say, your Zone V is 30%. You click the eyedropper on the sand (be sure to right-click the eyedropper and pick the 5x5 pt average reading) and check that Output is around 30% in the Curves windows. If it is not, shift the curve's points accordingly. Of course, if you have chosen a well balanced image, you do not have to do this with every image that you will be printing. This is done only once and that will be your own curve. You should repeat the procedure for different mixtures of platinum and palladium, or when changing paper, or printer, or with another contact printing process - but I prefer this approach rather than giving you different curves for pt, for pd, or for different printers on the market (I could not anyway). This way you will have to spend some time working at your own curve(s), but just think of the power in you hands: Ansel Adams was limited to place the shadows on Zone III or IV and develop to get a decent Zone VIII or IX. You, up to a certain limit, can place all the ten zones almost wherever you want! I usually re-print my wedge (both negative and in pt-pd) every six month, to make sure that my procedures are still correct. For example my wedge is now slightly darker than the first I printed years ago, probably because of the UV lamps aging.

Now when you are happy with your curve, click OK, then click again the fourth icon in the Layers window and pick Invert. Finally, click Flip Canvas Horizontally to mirror the image and print on Pictorico in the very same way as you printed the wedge. You can now print the negative as before and, if everything has been done correctly, almost certainly you will get a print that will look very similar to the one on the screen. As said earlier, from now on all your prints in palladium will print with the same time and the same contrast, provided that you spend some time at the computer to get a good negative. Sometimes, you may get a print that is not what you wanted because it does not look similar to the computer image, for example because the shadows are too thin. In this case it is easy to go back to the computer and tweak the curve a bit to give more details to the shadows. Then print the negative again. Since there is little control in the darkroom (because we are printing with as little contrast agent as possible), making a new negative is almost always more convenient. Of course, please always keep in mind that you are trying to match a transmitted light image on the PC with a reflected light subject, a print on watercolor paper which is obviously 100% matte. As said earlier, if you are coming to pt-pd from an high contrast printing process such as silver for example, please consider that here the contrast will be lower, the darkest shadows will be lighter, the tonal scale will be longer. If you like very contrasty and punchy images I think that platinum-palladium is not an appropriate medium.

Assuming that your first print satisfies you, after drying and flattening it, it is time to pass to the final part of the process, spotting and mounting, which will be discussed in Part 6/7.

About the Author

Luca Paradisi has been an internationally collected artist and fine art printmaker for many years. For more fine art photography inspiration you can visit his web site at artblackandwhite.com where he shows his work which includes landscapes, still life, abstracts, and architectural.


Darkroom


Darkroom


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Darkroom: A Memoir in Black and White is an arresting and moving personal story about childhood, race, and identity in the American South, rendered in stunning illustrations by the author, Lila Quintero Weaver.   In 1961, when Lila was five, she and her family emigrated from Buenos Aires, Argentina, to Marion, Alabama, in the heart of Alabama’s Black Belt. As educated, middle-class Latino immigrants in a region that was defined by segregation, the Quinteros occupied a privileged vantage from which to view the racially charged culture they inhabited. Weaver and her family were firsthand witnesses to key moments in the civil rights movement.  But Darkroom is her personal story as well: chronicling what it was like being a Latina girl in the Jim Crow South, struggling to understand both a foreign country and the horrors of our nation’s race relations. Weaver, who was neither black nor white, observed very early on the inequalities in the American culture, with its blonde and blue-eyed feminine ideal. Throughout her life, Lila has struggled to find her place in this society and fought against the discrimination around her.

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The art of darkroom developing and printing will never go out of style. Master darkroom specialist Steve Anchell is back to prove it in this long-awaited third edition of his enormously successful Darkroom Cookbook. Packed with over 200 "recipes," some common and others rare gems, you'll discover something new every time you open this guide, whether you're new to the darkroom or have been making your own prints for years. In addition to the formulas, you'll find tons of useful information on developers, push-processing, where to get darkroom equipment, how to set up your own darkroom, how to work and play in your darkroom safely, and much more. This handy guide will become a constant companion for every darkroom enthusiast creating prints at home or in the studio. In addition to complete updates throughout to reflect changes in the availability of chemicals and equipment, this third edition contains all new information on: *Reversal processing *Enlarged negatives *Pyro formulas *Plus expanded sections on printing, pyro, and toning prints Also included for the first time are special technique contributions as well as stunning black and white imagery by Bruce Barnbaum, Rod Dresser, Jay Dusard, Patrick Gainer, Richard Garrod, Henry Gilpin, Gordon Hutchings, Sandy King, Les McLean, Sa?d Nuseibeh, France Scully Osterman, Mark Osterman, Tim Rudman, Ryuijie, John Sexton, and John Wimberly. Be sure to visit www.darkroomcookbook.com to find useful links, an interactive user forum, and more! Steve Anchell is a photographer and author of The Variable Contrast Printing Manual, and co-author of The Film Developing Cookbook. He has been teaching darkroom and photography workshops since 1979. Steve is a member of the Freestyle Advisory Board of Photographic Professionals. "With its unrivalled collection of photographic formulae and easy to understand explanations of photographic processes, The Darkroom Cookbook has long been a favorite with darkroom workers everywhere. Now, with further additions to its formulary, more topics, and contributions by renowned darkroom experts, this new edition promises to be an indispensable Aladdin's Cave resource to darkroom enthusiasts of all levels." -Tim Rudman, photographer and author "The Darkroom Cookbook is an essential compendium of photographic information for anyone interested in high-quality darkroom work." -John Sexton, photographer *Packed with rare techniques for silver-based processing clearly explained by a darkroom master so you can create your own stunning prints at home or in the studio *Contains over 200 formulas - follow along step-by-step, or experiment with your own variations to develop new recipes! *Includes a brand-new chapter on analog variable contrast printing *Visit the new supplemental website to find useful links and an interactive user forum

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The Photoshop Darkroom offers limitless possibilities for photographers looking for jaw-dropping results, using powerful and innovative creative post-processing techniques. If you want folks to ask "How did you do that?" then this is the book for you! The images in The Photoshop Darkroom will inspire you and help you unleash your creative potential. You'll learn to view your own digital photography with new eyes. Step-by-step directions show you real-world examples of how to achieve the results you want from your photography and post-processing. *Learn how to work with RAW image files *Understand the Photoshop darkroom workflow *Multi-process RAW files *Extend the dynamic range of your photographs *Create High Dynamic Range (HDR) images by hand *Create stunning black and white imagery with Photoshop *Use layers and masking for compositing *Create striking color effects using LAB color

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In the aftermath of her mother`s suicide, one young woman recognizes the malleability of her reality. From her adolescence in the flat, hot Floridian landscape to a tectonic Missouri adulthood, a girl shaped by grief is compelled to create and manipulate her image of the world. As her dreams become indistinguishable from daily life, she begins to question memory, identity, and the function of love. Employing photography as its central metaphor, Darkroom tackles the tangled relationship between memory and mourning by exploring an artist`s impossible attempt to re-create the object of loss.

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Rated: NRSynopsis: He was found 15 years ago wandering a road near the woods, covered in dirt and blood with no name or memory. But when this now-grown mental patient is given an experimental new drug, he suddenly begins to have horrific visions of a beast that slaughters beautiful young women. Escaping from the institution, he is befriended by a teenage outcast who needs the stranger's help to unlock a few frantic secrets of his own. Together, the two will discover the violence of their pasts, the evil in their future, and the shocking secret that waits deep inside The Darkroom.

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The Darkroom Handbook, Second Edition, is a completely revised and updated version of a classic guide to the best design, construction, and equipment to use when setting up a darkroom. This book features ideas and money-saving tips on how to put a darkroom almost anywhere in your home or apartment. It takes you inside darkrooms of photographers around the world including those of famous photographers such as, Harry Callahan, Aaron Siskind, Berenice Abbott, and W. Eugene Smith. In addition, it contains detailed do-it-yourself plans for the most essential darkroom components, cutouts and design grids to plan that "dream" darkroom, and special sections on the color darkroom and the digital darkroom. The most comprehensive book on the darkroom. A step-by-step guide to help anyone plan and build a photo lab. Illustrated with an abundance of photos and sketches.

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A modern day masterpiece and the most critically acclaimed Dutch novel of the 20th centuryafinally available in English and shortlisted by Three Percent as one of the best translated books of 2008 During the German occupation of Holland, tobacconist Henri Osewoudt is visited by a man named Dorbeck, who strangely proves to be Osewoudtas spitting image in reverse. Dorbeck assigns Osewoudt to commit a series of dangerous assignments, but things quickly go awry, with Osewouldt eventually killing his own wife. After the war, Osewoudt is taken for a traitor and captured. Osewoudt cannot prove that he received assignments from Dorbeckahe cannot even prove that his doppelganger ever existed. As it forces readers to confront questions of morality and power, right and wrong, "The Darkroom of Damocles" builds to a stunning conclusion.

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A married couple that develops crime scene photos for the Salt Lake Police Department gradually finds the psychic toll of their job becoming too much to bear as the disturbing content of the pictures begins to weigh heavily on their morale and cast a suffocating blanket of melancholy over their very existence. Every day, David and Coy are reminded just how badly life can end. When David suffers a devastating disconnect from reality and Coy experiences serious complications while attempting to get pregnant, both of their lives begin spiraling down the same dark and dangerous path.

Darkroom (Hardcover)


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Description not available.

Darkroom Cookbook


Darkroom Cookbook


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