Originally Posted by
Manfred M
Thanks for posting. The equipment Birken uses is far larger than what I used, but the processes are quite familiar. The mask that is shown is where the "Unsharp Mask" concept in digital photography comes from. The dodging and burning he does are very much done the same way I did, although I used a vertical enlarger, not the horizontal design he uses.
Cibachrome printing is something I did as well and I 100% agree with his assessment of the look one gets out of the process. I was not quite as dedicated as he was, but spending 2 or 3 hours to do a single print was quite common. It's a dye-destructive reversal process, so only colour transparencies (slides) were printed with it.
The one place where the report is not quite accurate is that all the darkroom work you see him do is done in 100% darkness. While red or amber safelights were used for B&W work, colour materials were sensitive to those all the wavelengths of light so the only light that was on came from the enlarger. Cibachrome material was a bit harder to use because unlike other colour or B&W paper, it had that medium brown colour to it, so the image that was being printed was much harder to see and work with. Once the enlarger light went out, everything was done in total darkness, so a very solid workflow was required; everything had to be in its place because all work was done by touch and feel.
That certainly brought back memories.