This link has been bookmarked by 30 people . It was first bookmarked on 13 Aug 2008, by someone privately.
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29 May 13
Peter MooreA really useful tutorial on how to develop your own negatives at home. It's a surprisingly simple process.
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15 Nov 11
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light gets reflected off surfaces and through the lens of a camera, past an open shutter, and falls onto a piece of plastic coated with layers of light-sensitive emulsion. Silver halide crystals in the emulsion react by forming clusters of silver ions, creating a latent image
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When the film is submerged in developer, it transforms the silver ions into pure silver, leaving behind the halide crystals that weren’t struck by light.
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Those excess halide crystals are washed away with a second chemical called fixer, leaving metallic silver grains that are denser where the light was more intense during the exposure, producing a visible negative image.
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25 Apr 10
Besides offering you a more intimate role in the process, doing your own processing can possibly save you money and definitely save you time. It’s not difficult to do, and I guarantee that even a mediocre job will be better than the one done by most labs,
analog darkroom developing photography process tutorial howto film diy
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Robert PratherThe photoblog of Justin Ouellette; film photographs from New York.
cool development diy film howto photo photography reference darkroom developing tutorials
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