Equipment and Materials used – The Enlarger

Durst M670 BW

If you are just starting to experiment with printing your own photographs, there are plenty of cheap starter kits and enlargers available on eBay and photographic shops like Silverprint. Many of them come from Eastern Europe and Russia. They are perfectly acceptable and do the job.

If you are ready to move up to the next step then I can heartily recommend the Durst I use. It is sturdy and well made and very reliable. I have no idea if Durst still make them or how much they cost as I bought mine at least fifteen years ago, but a small amount of research should give you a pretty good idea of what is available at the moment.

I use a Hoya Super EL 50mm f2.8 lens on it which does the job perfectly well. As with a camera, it is worth spending slightly more on a lens as it is this that will add the most to the quality of an image.

Things to look out for if buying a second hand enlarger:

The one thing you want above all else in an enlarger is a strong sturdy base and column. The last thing you need is for it to wobble and move if you graze it accidentally while working on a print. Make sure the head can reach a good height, so you can print up to decent size. Also make sure you can rotate the head so you can project onto a wall if you do want to enlarge even more. You also want the head to hold its position. You don’t want it to start slipping down the column in the middle of a print.

Check the lens as you would for a camera lens (see separate article) for mould, scratches or chips in the elements. Again, the wider the aperture the better. Also check the mirrors in the enlarger in the same way.

Another thing to bear in mind is that traditional light bulbs over 100 watts have been banned in the last couple of years. I am not sure what will happen once specialist suppliers run out (I will do some research and find out) but for this reason it may be good to make sure there is a bulb supplied and what bulbs it takes (size and fitting – bayonet or screw). If buying a modern bulb, make sure it fits into the space and that it comes on spontaneously to it’s full brightness with no flickering or warming up.

Latest

Swarm

It was as simple as ‘get to the top of Finland and turn left’.  At least that is

Blink and you’ll miss it

Iceland. Never has the essence of a country so closely resembled the way in which I see the

Under the Stars in Madagascar

There are times when writing about memories from as far back as my eighteenth year feels wrong. How

Viewpoints

The Rooftop Collective exhibition edition VI Tempus Fugit. So they say. Here we are again, another Rooftop Collective

Memories

In Sweden without a camera

There have been many, many times over the last seven or eight years when I have been unable

Half a Mile from Russia

I do not know whether it is because of the generation I am from or whether Russia does

Blizzards in the Lake District

January 2010. New Years resolutions and a new found determination to drown myself in my photography again turned

Choreographed Papal baby blessings

The day of the Pope’s visit to London was all about the protests and marches for us. That

Randomly Selected

The Path Less Travelled?

Think of a landscape photographer and you may see Ansel Adams trekking up the side of a mountain

Equipment and Materials used – The Film

KODAK T-MAX 400 Once again I have been using T-Max pretty much since I started. To me it

Summer Evenings in the Pub

A couple of weeks ago I was working at Celtic Manor Golf Course – the venue for the

Speedometers and Bikes

When cycling around Eastern Europe it was very low-tech for Morgan and I. Our decision was spur of