From Darkroom to Print: The Craft Behind Exclusive Photo Books
Exclusive photo books start in the darkroom and end with prints you can hold. The process rewards steady hands and clear choices at each stage. Here is how it actually works when you make a small run by hand.
Sort and prep your negatives first
Begin by pulling the negatives that carry the sequence. Lay them on a light table and mark the keepers with a grease pencil. Skip anything that repeats the same tone or lacks a clear role in the story.
- Check for dust and scratches under magnification.
- Note the contrast grade needed for each frame.
- Group similar exposures so you can print them in one session.
Run test strips before full prints
Make a test strip for every negative you plan to use. Expose in three-second increments across a strip of paper. Develop it and study the steps under the same light you will use later.
Pick the exposure that shows detail in both shadows and highlights. Write the time and filter on the back of the strip so you do not lose the setting.
Choose paper that matches the images
Paper changes how the final book feels. Matte papers soften detail and suit quiet work. Glossy papers keep sharp edges and work for high-contrast scenes.
| Paper type | Best for | Example use |
|---|---|---|
| Fiber matte | Subtle tones | Portraits in available light |
| Glossy fiber | Deep blacks | Street scenes at night |
| Resin-coated | Quick drying | Test runs before final edition |
Order two boxes of the same batch so every print matches.
Print the edition in one go
- Set up trays, timer, and dodging tools before you start.
- Expose each sheet for the time you noted on the test strip.
- Develop, stop, and fix exactly the same minutes for every print.
- Hang prints to dry on a line with clips at top and bottom.
- Flatten overnight under weights once they are dry.
Keep the room at the same temperature so drying times stay consistent.
Assemble and check the finished book
Cut prints to final size with a straightedge and fresh blade. Stack them in order and run a quick flip test to catch any out-of-sequence pages.
Tip the stack under a strong light. Look for fingerprints, uneven borders, or dust specks you missed. Replace any print that fails before you bind or case the set.