View Full Version : Film Drier for Prison Cells and other Small Spaces


jd callow
02-27-2008, 01:12 PM
How do folks who live in match box apartments dry their film.

thanks

Monophoto
02-27-2008, 01:13 PM
Hang it in the shower.

Sanjay Sen
02-27-2008, 01:16 PM
Hang 'em over the bathtub on a string.

Lee Shively
02-27-2008, 01:19 PM
I live in an average size house and I hang my film in the bathroom to dry.

dpurdy
02-27-2008, 01:27 PM
The bathroom has the advantage of having less dust in the air, due to humidity. Also dripping on the floor is not such a crime.

Andy K
02-27-2008, 01:31 PM
Run the shower for a few minutes to steam up the bathroom. When the steam has cleared, so have most airborn particles. Then hang the film on the shower curtain rail.

jd callow
02-27-2008, 01:33 PM
The shower was where I planed on hanging the film, but thought there might be some unique, brillant or interesting alternatives...

arigram
02-27-2008, 01:35 PM
I have constructed this cabinet out of balsa wood and plastic sheet and it works well. I can hung about twenty rolls of 120 or 135 with ease. As you can see the space it takes is really small as is my darkroom.
As a side note, my darkroom has changed a lot since I took this photo, but the size of the room remains the same: it fits about three-four people standing along with all the furniture.

TheFlyingCamera
02-27-2008, 01:39 PM
Nah- just a string or other laundry-line type apparatus across the tub, and let the stuff dangle over the basin. If you want to get truly clever, Megaperls has these neat little coathanger-type devices to hang multiple sheets of 4x5 from in a fan-shape -

http://www.unicircuits.com/shop/product_info.php?currency=USD&cPath=22&products_id=35

They show it hanging from what looks like a shower curtain rod.

Nick Zentena
02-27-2008, 01:41 PM
Hang it off the balcony?

The darkroom is still a store room right now -(

David A. Goldfarb
02-27-2008, 02:32 PM
I hang it over the bathtub. In our last place I had two retractable clotheslines, which worked nicely. You can get them from a hardware store.

Mark_S
02-27-2008, 02:34 PM
I have yet to see a house which was not big enough to accommodate a sheet of 8x10 film, which is the largest format that I shoot, so I am confused by the question.

Whiteymorange
02-27-2008, 02:54 PM
When I first began reading the posts here, there was much made of drying 35mm film on its reel, in a sort of plastic wind chamber made out of PVC pipe with a (cool only) hair drier feeding filtered air in one end. Is that idea now out of favor due to excessive curl in the dried film? There were pictures posted and plans shared. I never got around to building one. A clothesline in my cool and not terribly dry studio seems to work fine.

zenrhino
03-03-2008, 01:09 AM
I found one of those WWII era Kinderman dryers on ebay. Its about the size of 3 or 4 paperback books stacked up. Works really really well with SS reels but my Jobo reels are just a skosh too big. For that I have to arrange the reels stacked with toothpicks between them (so air can flow) and cover them both with the jobo tank that sits over them and the air exhaust hole.

If your film isnt super curl-prone to start with (Foma and Forte, for instance) you'll do just fine.

Far as that goes, I get along just fine (long as I dont want to do color, I use the job for that and that takes room) with 1 1-reel ss tank, 1 2-reel ss tank and a a small plastic tub with a lid for my chem and measuring stuff. It all goes right back under the sink when Im done except for the film dryer. If I stuck with Rodinal I could reduce the entire thing to the size of a shoebox. :D

Nicole
03-03-2008, 01:24 AM
JD I still use the bathroom as well. Not that innovative but it works well - late at night or whilst the kids are at school.

Thanasis
03-03-2008, 01:38 AM
I hang my rolls up to dry in a corner in the kitchen with some clothes pegs that sit at a nice height when fixed into some metal shelving. They hang over a small bin that we use to keep recycleable goods so no-one cares that it gets dripped on.

jd callow
03-03-2008, 01:53 AM
Nah- just a string or other laundry-line type apparatus across the tub, and let the stuff dangle over the basin. If you want to get truly clever, Megaperls has these neat little coathanger-type devices to hang multiple sheets of 4x5 from in a fan-shape -

http://www.unicircuits.com/shop/product_info.php?currency=USD&cPath=22&products_id=35

They show it hanging from what looks like a shower curtain rod.

I bought two of the hangers that Scott posted above. I'll let you know how it worksout.

tim_walls
03-03-2008, 05:21 AM
Roll film I hang from a lightfitting in the living room - it drips so little it's never even occurred to me to hang it over the bath! (I have hard floors rather than carpet, mind.)

Sheet film put on a dishrack in the sink (not the same rack we use for the washing up though!)

jd callow
03-12-2008, 01:57 AM
All the way from Japan my fancy new film hangers arrive. My wife looks at them and says, "did you get those at the dollar store? No. You paid to have them shipped from Japan? You know those are for knickers not film?" So these puppies may be doing dual duty so I can recoup my investment.

el wacho
03-15-2008, 08:21 PM
in the reels, behind the picture of raquel welsh...

Don Dudenbostel
03-15-2008, 08:24 PM
Go to a Walmart or Big K and get a retractable clothes line made for a bathroom. Chaep and retracts out of the way.

aparat
03-15-2008, 08:43 PM
I got a Senrac on-reel film dryer from Craigslist very inexpensively. The negatives dry quickly and very cleanly. The slight curl disappears after a day in film sleeves under a couple of heavy books. The Senrac unit is fairly compact and can be wall-mounted.

aparat

cotdt
03-15-2008, 10:57 PM
i have constructed a wooden hanger for my prison cell.


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