:QUOTE [quotetype:personal] A darkroom print from film has no pixels. That absence is felt more than seen. :INFO What You Need to Start a Home Darkroom A darkroom requires a light-tight space, an enlarger with a compatible lens, a light source timer, and three trays of chemistry in the correct sequence: developer, stop bath, and fixer. A bathroom with blacked-out windows is the most common home darkroom. The minimum usable setup for 35mm printing costs around $300 to $500 sourced from used equipment markets. :COUNTER.half 68 F / 20 C | :COUNTER.half 90 Seconds :PATH Set Up Safelight and Chemistry Arrange three trays in sequence and mix chemistry at 68 F. | :INFO Set Up Safelight and Chemistry Arrange developer, stop bath, and fixer trays left to right in a sink or on a flat surface. Mix chemistry to 68°F — use a thermometer. Dektol developer diluted 1:2 with water is the standard. Stop bath is diluted acetic acid or a commercial indicator stop. Fixer is sodium thiosulfate or rapid fixer. Set up a red or amber safelight at least 4 feet from your print processing area. :PATH Make a Test Strip Expose a strip of paper at multiple exposure intervals to find correct time. | :INFO Make a Test Strip Cut a 1-inch strip of photographic paper. Place it under the enlarger, covering most of the strip with a piece of opaque cardboard. Expose 5 seconds. Move the card to uncover the next section. Expose another 5 seconds. Continue across the strip. Develop the test strip normally. The correctly exposed section shows detail in both highlights and shadows without either washing out or blocking up. :PATH Make the Full Print Set exposure from the test strip and expose a full sheet. | :INFO Make the Full Print Using the exposure time confirmed by your test strip, expose a full sheet of photographic paper. Slide it into the developer tray emulsion-side up in one smooth motion. Rock the tray continuously. The image will appear within 30 to 45 seconds and reach full development at 90 seconds for RC paper. Stop, fix, and wash. :PATH Dry and Evaluate Evaluate the wet print, then dry before final assessment. | :INFO Dry and Evaluate Wet prints appear slightly darker than their dry equivalent — a phenomenon called "dry-down." Evaluate the wet print with this in mind. For fiber base paper, dry flat on a screen and flatten under weight when cool. For RC paper, a hair dryer or print drier produces a flat, dry print in minutes. Always do your final assessment of print quality on a dry print in consistent lighting. :CHECKLIST Basic Darkroom Setup [ ] Light-tight room — bathroom with blackout fabric works [ ] Enlarger with 50mm lens for 35mm, 80mm for 120 film [ ] Lens timer (Gralab or similar) [ ] Three processing trays — 8x10 minimum [ ] Dektol developer, stop bath, fixer [ ] Ilford Multigrade RC paper for starting out [ ] Red safelight (OC filter or red LED) [ ] Thermometer and measuring graduates :NOTE Focus with a Grain Magnifier The most common beginner darkroom mistake is printing out of focus. Your eyes adjust to the projected image and cannot reliably judge sharpness. A grain magnifier placed on the easel base lets you focus on the actual silver grain of the negative projected at full magnification. Invest in one before your first printing session. :QUOTE [quotetype:personal] The image appears in the developer tray. Every time. That part never gets ordinary. :LINK https://www.ilfordphoto.com/darkroom-printing-guide Ilford Photo — Complete Darkroom Printing Guide