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I've seen the motorized vents and Keeble and Schucat. If you haven't been to the SF Bay area, that is the "bring lots of cash but we have the best" camera store. It is one of the few lens rental places in the area. The have the Jobo AT1500 there as well. Getting back to the darkroom, I remember in high school handling the prints with bare hands. Even worse, one trick we learned was to rub the areas on the print you wanted to get developed a bit more because the friction would heat up the area, which in turn speeded up development. I'm guessing today nobody puts their fingers in the chemical baths. > -----Original Message----- > From: owner-scan@leben.com [mailto:owner-scan@leben.com]On Behalf Of > byard pidgeon > Sent: Wednesday, December 26, 2001 5:38 PM > To: scan@leben.com > Subject: Re: Levels & Curves > > > When you're putting in that "small darkroom", be sure you learn how to > ventilate it properly so you don't poison yourself. > The American Lung Association may have some info for you on this. > > on 12/26/2001 11:11 AM, gary at gsellani@accesscom.com wrote: > > > No argument that the digital manipulation is better than what > you can do by > > hand in a chemical process. > > > > That said, I have a house in design stage and will put in a > small darkroom, > > something I always wanted. We may reach a point in history > where I am the > > last guy in America doing wet photography. ;-) I notice lots of > enlargers > > showing up on the used market. Hmmm..... > > - > Turn off HTML mail features. Keep quoted material short. Use accurate > subject lines. http://www.leben.com/lists for list instructions. > - Turn off HTML mail features. Keep quoted material short. Use accurate subject lines. http://www.leben.com/lists for list instructions.
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