I shot my first pair of NoddaDuma dry plates a couple of weeks ago. I love wandering around the desolate areas--plenty of those in the Dakotas. I'm always looking for abandoned farm houses etc. I've been photo'ing them with my Chamonix 045n and lenses c.1905-1925 and FP4+, usually. I found an abandoned country school in the northeast part of South Dakota that had an old piano in it that seemed to have potential, so I shot two plates. Lens was an 1858 Derogy Petzval, about 5 inch and f3.5. I used ND filters to get my exposure down to 1s, and bracketed at 2s. Metering done with Minolota IVf. The 2s was the closest. It has scanned well, I think. I like the plates. This is the look I've been after for years, but just didn't want to commit to wet plate. As an outdoor photographer I don't know how practical that would be for a guy who lives in a place where it's below freezing four months of the year. The dry plates give me what I want.
Now for my issue. I sent the plates to Blue Moon next day mail on a Tuesday, but they didn't get them processed until the following Tuesday. I got them back on Friday, roughly 10 days after mailing them off. I do understand these take time to do, and Sarah et al. at Blue Moon were very nice to me and helpful on the phone. However, ten days just seem like an eternity when I'm trying to learn how to shoot the plates. It's also $5 per plate processing, plus the postage. All in all each plate is costing me over $10. (Don't you 11x14 shooters dare snicker!) I really like the dry plates but do want to cut the costs, and see much quicker results. So, I think I need to start processing my own at some point.
I processed a little bit of 35mm b&w in a high school lab 20 years ago, and that's it. However, I didn't find it hard. I have no dark room, but do have an interior bathroom that is very dark at night and has a sink with running water. I've also bought a Patterson red safe light to load the plates with. What else do I need? What would be the simplest set up? Could i just call up Blue Moon and ask them to send me what I need? How long does it take to process a small batch (~4) of 4x5 plates? Is there a video I can watch somewhere? There is no one nearby to show me. My plan for now is to keep scanning the plates, but eventually I would like to start contact printing using the sun. I don't see how that could be all that hard either. If all this seems to work out I will start processing my own sheet film too. I also want to start shooting plates on my Gundlach Korona 5x7 as I can use my bigger Petzvals on it. Finally, I'm getting the historic look I've been after for years!
Last weekend I took photos of three officers of the U.S. 7th Calvary. They were dressed in Civil War uniforms and posed at a Civil War era fort (Ft. Sisseton, SD), but these guys really are active duty military in the U.S. 7th Calvary! I shot two plates and four sheets of FP4+. I'm really excited about this and so are they. The fact the very first plates I shot came out gives me hope these will be even better. I won't get them back until this coming Friday though. There is a bigger Civil War re-enactor event coming up in two months, and I want to be more practiced and ready for it.
Any comments on below photo are welcome. I really want to learn.
Kent in SD
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