Introduction to the Darkroom is a six-hour, hands-on analogue photography course in London that guides newcomers through black-and-white film development, contact printing and enlarger work. The course meets at Photography Course London, Eastside Educational Trust building, 37 Hackney Road, London E2 7NX and uses lab space close to central creative neighborhoods; some classes may use Holborn Studios, Eagle Wharf Rd, London N1 7ED, UK as an alternate address for sessions. Designed for anyone aged 16 and up, the curriculum moves from the anatomy of film cameras and ASA/ISO basics to loading and unloading film, mixing and using darkroom chemicals, making contact sheets, and printing with an enlarger.
You’ll work with real negatives and living processes: developing, washing, fixing, then placing a negative in an enlarger to make prints you can dodge, burn and grade with multigrade filters. Instructors break techniques into manageable steps, teaching safe chemical handling, accurate timing and repeatable printing methods so you leave with an archive of mounted, dried prints and the know-how to reproduce them. The class structure is deliberately compact—six hours to introduce practical workflows without overwhelming newcomers—and the teachers tailor demonstrations to small groups or one-to-one sessions when enrollment is low.
What makes this course stand out in London is the tactile focus. Amid a city dominated by screens, working in a darkroom reconnects you to the physicality of image-making: silver halide on paper, the smell of developer, the satisfying reveal as an image appears in the tray. The setting sits on the edge of Hackney’s creative corridor where street photography, gallery culture and analogue workshops overlap; the practical skills you learn translate directly into projects around Shoreditch, Hoxton and nearby markets.
Logistics are straightforward: aim to arrive 5–10 minutes early and ring the PCL door bell to be let in. The classroom is on the first floor with no lift; if you have accessibility concerns contact the office in advance. Bring a notepad, any existing negatives or cameras if you have them, and an open mind. No prior darkroom experience is required; a basic sense of exposure helps but isn’t essential.
For visitors who want to slow down and develop a photographic practice, Introduction to the Darkroom offers an essential bridge from digital to analogue—a compact, skill-rich day that leaves you with printmaking techniques and a fresh appreciation for light, chemistry and craft. After class, take a short walk to Brick Lane and Columbia Road to test prints against the streets; local labs, camera shops and cafés make it easy to keep experimenting. The school will offer one-to-one sessions if you’re the only enrollee, and instructors can recommend next steps so your analogue practice continues beyond a single day. Book early online.