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the last word

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You are here: Home / The Last Word / Goodbye to the darkroom sink

Goodbye to the darkroom sink

July 30, 2018 JimK 4 Comments

I moved into my present house in 2000. When construction started, I was still doing some chemical photography, so I put in a darkroom and moved my 1980’s era Cal Stainless sink in. By the time I got settled — oh, that punch list — that phase of my photographic life was waning rapidly. I hardly used my sink.

I’ve been doing studio work in what was once my darkroom, using the sink as a table. Recently, I got a chance to donate the big sink to a good cause: Kim, Zach, and Gina Weston’s Weston Collective, where it will be used by future students of chemical photography. Kim, Zach, and two strong men came by today to perform the sink extraction.

Here’s the story in pictures:

The sink with the lights and drops stripped away

 

After getting rid of more stuff

 

Photographer’s view of the sink

 

Disconnecting the plumbing

 

The top part was the easy part

 

Using the chemical mixing faucet for a handle

 

Looking good

 

Here’s the bottom part

 

Let’s give it a try

 

It’s going to be tight

 

Won’t fit; let’s take off the door

 

Will that be enough?

 

One door down; one to go

 

But there’s a post in the way

 

Let’s roll it 90 degrees

 

Now we can get around the post

 

Bye, bye, sink frame

 

Gosh, there’s lots of space in here now

 

 

 

The Last Word

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Comments

  1. brian says

    August 1, 2018 at 5:39 am

    I occasionally miss the smell of fixer.
    Maybe someone could come up with an air freshener version.

    Reply
    • JimK says

      August 1, 2018 at 8:02 am

      I sure don’t miss the smell of Cibachrome Blix.

      Reply
  2. Tony A says

    August 2, 2018 at 12:43 pm

    I felt an exciting sense of possibility in just the word “LIGHTroom”. Smartest, most meaning-loaded product name ever.

    I don’t miss delaying the start of my printing sessions until everyone else in the household had gone to bed. I do miss the very cinematic experience of seeing the fade-in of a B&W print in the tray though.

    About a decade ago I was thrilled to discover that the local university actually wanted my enlarger, color analyzer, mechanized print processor, etc. etc. etc., and would put it to good use. But I wouldn’t be surprised if they’ve gotten rid of it all since then. Part of me doesn’t want to find out.

    Reply
  3. Bruce Oudekerk says

    August 3, 2018 at 9:23 am

    I retired from teaching in 2001 and donated my beautiful old Omega D2 (et al.) to the school’s darkroom. I found it a bittersweet experience and, given the proliferation of digital photography, I suspect the entirety of that wet lab equipment now resides in the local landfill. Like Tony, I really don’t want to know. Your darkroom sink has avoided that ignominious death and that makes me smile.

    Reply

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