- published: 01 Jul 2015
- views: 142965
A safelight is a light source suitable for use in a photographic darkroom. It provides illumination only from parts of the visible spectrum to which the photographic material in use is nearly or completely insensitive.
A safelight usually consists of an ordinary light bulb in a housing closed off by a coloured filter, but sometimes a special light bulb or fluorescent tube with suitable filter material coated directly on the glass is used in an ordinary fixture.
Differently sensitised materials require different safelights. In traditional black-and-white photographic printing, photographic papers are normally handled under an amber or red safelight, as such papers are typically sensitive only to blue and green light. Orthochromatic papers and films are also sensitive to yellow light and must be used only with a deep red safelight, not with an amber one.Panchromatic films and papers, nominally sensitive to the entire spectrum, sometimes have a region of minimum in their range of sensitivity which allows the careful use of safelight confined to that part of the spectrum, e.g. Kodak Panalure panchromatic paper, tolerant of limited exposure to light filtered through a Kodak 13 Safelight Filter. Other panchromatic materials must be handled only in total darkness.
Sing your Hollywood sixteen
runnin' 'round the gravel green.
Sing your Hollywood sixteen
runnin' 'round the gravel green.
Mmmmm...
Yes, now get it, now get it together, go.
Bumm-bumm.
Now bumm-bumm-bumm-bumm-bumm,
bumm-bumm-bumm...
And then we'll get, we'll get six gui-,
six guitars,
and then we'll get six guitars and we'll,
we'll get fourt-, get, and we'll get,
we get Herbie Lovelle to play drums,