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Thread: Drying Large Negatives

  1. #11
    William Whitaker's Avatar
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    Re: Drying Large Negatives

    There are some good suggestions here. I appreciate everyone's response.

    Several variables make this too complicated to explain fully. Clearly, drying negatives in my own home is the safest solution and perhaps that will work. But living in a 350 sq ft studio apartment has its limitations. And the addition of a plastic container large enough to house six or eight 12x20 negatives is a major space consideration. Large format camera, small format apartment. I'll speak to the management at the rental darkroom and see if they have any suggestions.

  2. #12
    lenser's Avatar
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    Re: Drying Large Negatives

    Why not address the original issue of the dryer not working. Is it an problem with a blower motor or a heating element? Is there any possibility of modifying it with the addition of a commercial grade salon type of hand held hair dryer and having that blow through an appropriate air filter to avoid debris, thereby restoring the cabinet to some kind of working function? I once built a drying cabinet out of wood using that exact technique and had no problems with dust so long as I kept the filters in place. I simply used two sandwiched furnace filters with the hair dryer about 14 inches away from those for obvious safety reasons. Using photo-flo on the film made drying a matter of minutes for either rolls or racks of sheet film. I started with wire for the film clips to hang from, but switched to aluminum arrow shafts when the wire proved to sag too much and allowed the film to touch it's neighbors.

    By the way, I got that idea from a seminar speaker who described making his color print process line temperature controlled by sinking a series of stainless 8x10 tanks into a counter top and then using the enclosed cabinet space below as a hot air jacket with four or five of the hair dryers plugged into one thermostat control which would flip the power on or off as needed to maintain the optimum temperature.
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  3. #13
    http://www.spiritsofsilver.com tgtaylor's Avatar
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    Re: Drying Large Negatives

    This would probably be your best bet with film that large:

    http://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/produc...CD_20_for.html

    I found the smaller CD 10 on a local ebay auction site for $90 (local pick-up). An Arkay RC 2100 print dryer may work as the film/paper doen not touch anything but the rollers and you can adjust the heat and speed. Also check and see if there is a clothing wardrobe that will accomodate that size. I routinely dry 120, 4x5, and 8x10 film in a womens wardrobe that I bought at WalMart for $5, as well as 9x11 and 12x15 alternative prints. The front zips up protectig from dust. Although I have the CD10 I prefer to air dry my negatives and use the dryer for overflow.

    Thomas

  4. #14

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    Re: Drying Large Negatives

    Squeegee then transport in a blotter book. Hang 'em when you get home with clips on the bottoms
    "I would feel more optimistic about a bright future for man if he spent less time proving that he can outwit Nature and more time tasting her sweetness and respecting her seniority"---EB White

  5. #15
    Rick Olson's Avatar
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    Re: Drying Large Negatives

    As much as one sheet of 12 x 20 film costs, along with the trouble taken to make the image, I would not hesitate to transport the negatives home in water-filled drums or by some other means. I have used rental/public darkrooms before and it's a bit of a free-for-all in there with a lack of care and discipline by some.

  6. #16
    William Whitaker's Avatar
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    Re: Drying Large Negatives

    Quote Originally Posted by lenser View Post
    Why not address the original issue of the dryer not working...
    But that's not the issue. The issue is that there is not enough space in the dryer for 12x20 negatives.

    Thomas - I actually have a nice Arkay film dryer. Even if I had it in my apartment, I would have to transport the wet negatives home somehow. There's no room for it to live at the rental darkroom. And if it lived there, I'd have to fight other people to use my own dryer. It's a thousand miles away in storage at my house waiting for me to retire.

    Rick - Water-filled drums? I almost threw my back out just thinking about it...

    Quote Originally Posted by John Kasaian View Post
    Squeegee then transport in a blotter book. Hang 'em when you get home with clips on the bottoms
    That sounds too simple. Even if I couldn't find a 12x20 blotter book, I could interleave the negatives with the same kind of paper. But is that safe for the negatives? If that's a realistic solution, I could keep one 16x20 tray at the apartment for a final wash/Photo-Flo rinse before hanging up to dry. And yes, Photo-Flo is de rigueur!

  7. #17
    Rick Olson's Avatar
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    Re: Drying Large Negatives

    Hi Will,

    During my college years, I had to do just that for some large Ilford Galerie FB prints. I got tired of trying to enforce the darkroom rule of not adding fixed prints to the wash until the current group was complete. I went to the equipment check-out, got some large drums, filled them with water and transported the prints home to wash them in the tub. Today, I have my own darkroom so no problems.

  8. #18
    William Whitaker's Avatar
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    Re: Drying Large Negatives

    Thanks Rick. We were both younger then.

  9. #19
    Just waiting to be developed..
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    Re: Drying Large Negatives

    Blotter books would most likely leave fibers and or an impression in the emulsion.
    Squeegeeing the negative can really scratch it up. I tried that early on with 35mm and that was a bad experience.
    I hang my 12x20s in a home made cabinet. I use lever type stainless clips that have one contact point and are about 2” long.
    Ive seen them on ebay a few times but mine came from my grandfathers darkroom.
    I use 4 clips on the top and 4 on the bottom. Never a dropped sheet and the clip marks are outside the image area.
    I don’t like clothespins because they leave a nasty mark and more often then not end up in the image area.

    I made my cabinet out of 2x4s and MDF, about 7’x2’x2'. I added a heater/blower from home depot and a right angle duct to blow the hot air in.
    Also a fan at the bottom to exhaust the air and a timer controller with preset times.
    Under the heater i installed 2 hepa filters which work really well. On the top i made 2 wood rails that i slide in ¼” thick wood slats that have hooks for the film clips.
    All in i think i spent $150.00, the most expensive part was the heater, fan and the timer controller that i installed.
    I would have bought a film dryer but it was to big to fit into the car so i built this in place.

    There is an option for apartment drying. Go to home depot and get some plastic drop cloth.
    Use wood rods or pvc pipe to make a box or rectangle that will fit as many sheets as you want.
    Add some rods to hang the film off of, maybe 4 or 5” from the top.
    Tape the drop cloth around it with a few holes at the bottom for air to escape. Get a fan and some hepa filter material.
    Put the fan on top and with the filter over the intake and make a hole in the top of the cabinet.
    That should work to dry the film while keeping the dust out, just remember to add a flap to get the film in and out.
    The drying cabinet can fit in a closet or on a table. You can probably also make it collapsable.
    -Ian Mazursky
    www.ianmazursky.com Travel, Landscape, Portraits and my 12x20 diary
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  10. #20

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    Re: Drying Large Negatives

    I would not attempt to dry them at a public lab.
    Get a plastic container large enough for them and transport home wet.
    I use dental x-ray clip for all my sheet film up to 7x17. They never fail. A tiny hole is punched in the very corner of the selvidge to hold them.

    Jim

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