safelight

Information about safelight

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An amber (light brown) for use with certain black and white photographic papers.
Safelight is light used in a photographic darkroom and is designed to provide illumination without that part of the light spectrum to which the material in use is sensitive. A safelight usually consists of an ordinary lightbulb in a housing with a coloured filter, but it is possible to buy special bulbs and fluorescent tubes which are coated with a filter directly on the glass.

Initially, monochrome photographic film was sensitive to blue and green light and could be handled under a deep red light. This material was called Orthochromatic film meaning that it theoretically correctly reproduced any colour as a shade of grey. However since it was designed to be handled in red light it actually meant that any red objects were rendered as black. Manufacturers then developed Panchromatic film but since this was sensitive to red light it has to be handled in either total darkness or in some instances a dark brown or violet light can be used. In either case these safelights are so dim as to be almost useless.

Until the middle of the 20th century, monochrome photographic paper was sensitive to blue and green light and required a deep red safelight. Photographic paper has been sensitive to just blue light for a great many years now, enabling yellow safelights to be used which provide much more light for the photographer to work in. Despite this, darkroom scenes in movies invariably show the use of a red light. In 2004, Lee Lighting introduced a theatrical lighting colour called "Rust" that closely approximates the colour of modern safelights.
darkroom is a workspace, usually a separate area in a building or a vehicle, made dark to allow photographers to use light-sensitive materials to develop film and photographic paper to make photographic prints.
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Monochrome comes from the two Greek words mono (μoνο, meaning "only" or "alone"), and chroma (χρωμα, meaning "colour"). A monochromatic object has a single colour.
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Photographic film is a sheet of plastic (polyester, nitrocellulose or cellulose acetate) coated with an emulsion containing light-sensitive silver halide salts (bonded by gelatin) with variable crystal sizes that determine the sensitivity, contrast and resolution of the film.
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Monochrome comes from the two Greek words mono (μoνο, meaning "only" or "alone"), and chroma (χρωμα, meaning "colour"). A monochromatic object has a single colour.
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Until the advent of digital photographic processes, the sole meaning of photographic paper was paper coated with light-sensitive chemicals.

So-called photo papers of today are often specially coated papers for use in inkjet or laser printers to make digital prints .
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Until the advent of digital photographic processes, the sole meaning of photographic paper was paper coated with light-sensitive chemicals.

So-called photo papers of today are often specially coated papers for use in inkjet or laser printers to make digital prints .
..... Click the link for more information.
darkroom is a workspace, usually a separate area in a building or a vehicle, made dark to allow photographers to use light-sensitive materials to develop film and photographic paper to make photographic prints.
..... Click the link for more information.
Film is a term that encompasses individual motion pictures, the field of film as an art form, and the motion picture industry. Films are produced by recording images from the world with cameras, or by creating images using animation techniques or special effects.
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