Flushing modern photochemicals down the toilet really isn't such a good
idea.
On Saturday 02 Feb 2002 9:53 pm, R Duarte wrote:
> interesting. do you think she measured the amount of concentrate for the
> amount of water that she thought the bowl was holding and then mixed it in
> the toilet? th
don't know if there is a website...I just have a copy of his book...r.
ssion] small toilet darkroom
> Rob, I think you're referring to Steven Pippin's work..he used a railroad
> station restroom as a pinhole camera obscura and used the toilet bowl as a
> developing tank. The Museum of Modern Art has copies of his book that
> accompanied his exhi
In a message dated 2/3/02 1:39:46 PM, robrien...@aol.com writes:
<< Rob, I think you're referring to Steven Pippin's work..he used a railroad
station restroom as a pinhole camera obscura and used the toilet bowl as a
developing tank. The Museum of Modern Art has copies of his book that
accompan
Rob, I think you're referring to Steven Pippin's work..he used a railroad
station restroom as a pinhole camera obscura and used the toilet bowl as a
developing tank. The Museum of Modern Art has copies of his book that
accompanied his exhibit (he also used a washing machine pinhole camera
obscu
x27;d imagine you have to make sure you don't flush the prints
down the toilet by accident. hah.
rob
From: "Kosinski Family"
Reply-To: pinhole-discussion@p at ???
List-Post: pinhole-discussion@pinhole.com
Date: Sat, 2 Feb 2002 14:21:58 -0500
To:
Subject: [pinhole-discussion]
Dennis Johanson writes
"I am the guy presently converting a (too small) guest toilet into a darkroom"
well, this reminds me of a student who lived in a very small apartment in
Chinatown with a tiny bathroom... she solved this problem by developing b&w
prints right in the toilet and flushing the