:QUOTE [quotetype:personal] You are not in a darkroom. You are in a changing bag for three minutes. Everything after that is chemistry and timing. :INFO What You Actually Need Developing black and white film requires no darkroom. The only step performed in complete darkness is loading the film onto a plastic reel and sealing it inside a developing tank. A changing bag replaces the darkroom entirely. Once the tank is sealed, every remaining step happens in ordinary room light. :COUNTER.half 68 Degrees F / 20 Degrees C | :COUNTER.half 4 Inversions :PATH Load the Film in Total Darkness Practice with a ruined roll in daylight first. Feed the leader into the reel and rotate the halves to walk film inward. Drop the reel into the tank and press the funnel lid firmly until it clicks. :PATH Mix and Temper Your Developer Mix D-76 at 1:1 dilution with water and bring to 68°F / 20°C using a warm water bath. A thermometer is required — one degree of variance meaningfully shifts development speed and contrast. :PATH Develop the Film Pour developer in and start the timer. Agitate constantly for the first 30 seconds, then 4 inversions every 30 seconds. Tap the tank firmly after each burst to dislodge air bubbles from the film surface. :PATH Stop, Fix, and Wash Pour out developer and add stop bath for 30 seconds with constant agitation. Add fixer for 5 to 10 minutes with the same pattern. Fixer can be reused until exhausted. Wash for 20 minutes under running water. :COUNTER.half 30 Seconds | :COUNTER.half 5 to 10 Minutes :PATH Dry the Film Without Spots Add 2 drops of Kodak Photo-Flo to a final distilled water rinse. Swish gently and drain without rinsing again. Unroll the film, clip both ends, and hang in a dust-free space. A post-shower bathroom reduces static dust. :CHECKLIST Equipment List [ ] Paterson Universal Tank (holds 1 or 2 rolls of 35mm) [ ] Changing bag, double-layered opaque fabric with arm holes [ ] 35mm canister opener (film picker or bottle opener) [ ] Thermometer — darkroom type or digital probe [ ] Timer — phone timer works perfectly [ ] Graduates: 100ml and 1000ml measuring cylinders [ ] Film clips or clothespins for hanging negatives to dry :NOTE Loading Is the Only Step You Cannot Redo Scratches running the full length of a roll mean the film dragged on the canister lip during extraction. Use a bottle opener to pop the canister top completely open before pulling the leader. A dark vertical stripe on one edge of every frame means the reel halves were misaligned when threading. Practice loading in daylight with a ruined roll until it takes under 90 seconds. :QUOTE [quotetype:personal] Development is a conversation between chemistry, time, and temperature. The film remembers everything the camera recorded. :LINK https://www.ilfordphoto.com/beginners-guide-to-film-developing Ilford Photo — Complete Beginner's Guide to Film Development