Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2009/11/05
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]When I was diagnosed with kidney cancer, the family concluded it was an open and shut case - the darkroom got me. Actually, my surgeon said there was really no specific for renal carcinoma, but to shut everyone up I promised to limit my exposure. Then one evening I was walking past my son's room and he was using this program, Photoshop...he showed me how to crop a photo and I was hooked. That was v. 3 or 4 and now I'm on v. 10. I figure that when I die my family will say, poor Ken, if only he knew the radiation he was absorbing from those monitors. Seriously, I do think people should know the basics, which many instructors do not know. You have to be committed to adequate fans and ventilation. If you can smell it or taste it you are ingesting it. My darkroom had twice the recommended air flow. I won't go in our local student darkroom for that reason. Don't dunk your hands in solutions with heavy metals (fixer with dissolved silver, selenium, gold 231 and all that). If you are doing alt processes with some nasty stuff (amidol, pyro developers etc.) investigate further. As other posters have noted, I believe it is all moot now for most of us. Ken (A lot of my printing was platinum/palladium, where you pour the emulsion on from a shot glass. A major concern was that under safelight it looked a lot like single malt -- a mental lapse might be really bad.) > what we now do should be, in part, based on an objective evaluation of > what happened then... > conclusions, then new safer practices if needed. > is there in fact any clear conclusions, that lead to altered practices? > so far, I haven't been able to see a clear linkage... > > surely some of the old pro's who have lived through all this can > enlighten me, > > Steve > > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information