item: #1 of 14
          id: 168
      author: Snelling, Henry Hunt
       title: The History and Practice of the Art of Photography
        date: None
       words: 36973
      flesch: 61
     summary: It is only necessary to take a sheet of photographic paper (the bromide paper is the best), and place it in contact with a calotype picture previously rendered transparent by wax or oil as before directed. While in the form of crystal it is not injured by exposure to light, but the bottles containing the solutions of this salt should at all times be kept wrapped in dark paper, and excluded from daylight. II.
    keywords: acid; action; art; blue; camera; chloride; color; daguerreotype; dark; fig; glass; light; nitrate; paper; photographic; picture; plate; process; rays; red; sensitive; silver; solution; surface; time; use; water; yellow
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        item: #2 of 14
          id: 33034
      author: Canadian Kodak Company
       title: Premo Cameras, 1914
        date: None
       words: 13864
      flesch: 77
     summary: Style C. For use with Kodak Automatic shutter, 3-1/4 × 4-1/4. Style CC. For use with Kodak Automatic shutter, 3-1/4 × 5-1/2 and 4 × 5. Style D. For use with B. & L. Automatic and Century Automatic shutters, 3-1/4 × 4-1/4. Style DD.
    keywords: .50; camera; exposures; film; illustration; kodak; lens; pack; plate; premo; shutter; size; tripod; use
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        item: #3 of 14
          id: 33183
      author: Canadian Kodak Company
       title: Kodaks and Kodak Supplies, 1914
        date: None
       words: 17641
      flesch: 71
     summary: The first of these models, the No. 1 Kodak Junior, makes 2-1/4 × 3-1/4 pictures and loads with the Kodak Film cartridge of six exposures (No. 120). These differ from the Specials in that they are simply our regular Kodak models, without the special covering and finish of Specials, and fitted with anastigmat lenses specially designed by Taylor, Taylor & Hobson, for Kodak use and called the Cooke Kodak Anastigmat.
    keywords: .50; = =; automatic; brownie; camera; ditto; exposures; film; illustration; inches; kodak; lens; pictures; pocket; shutter; size; | |
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        item: #4 of 14
          id: 35709
      author: Davis, Frederick C.
       title: Making Your Camera Pay
        date: None
       words: 17075
      flesch: 69
     summary: The field for _making_ photographs extends from the top margin to the bottom, and from the left to the right. The field for _selling_ photographs--which is more to the point--extends over about five thousand publications which use prints; not to speak of a few score of other markets.
    keywords: american; articles; book; camera; chicago; editor; interest; magazine; makers; making; market; material; new; news; photographs; press; prints; publication; rights; size; subjects; time; use; work; world; york
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        item: #5 of 14
          id: 36446
      author: Blaney, Henry R.
       title: Photogravure
        date: None
       words: 17308
      flesch: 74
     summary: Pans can be used made of tin and varnished, or porcelain trays, protecting the back and edges of the plate with varnish, but I find the wax very helpful, especially on large plates. For large plates, 20 lbs.
    keywords: acid; cents; chapter; cloth; co.; copper; covers; deg; edition; gelatine; glass; minutes; negative; new; paper; photographic; photogravure; plate; printing; process; solution; street; tissue; water; york
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        item: #6 of 14
          id: 37743
      author: Muybridge, Eadweard
       title: The Attitudes of Animals in Motion, Illustrated with the Zoopraxiscope
        date: None
       words: 5312
      flesch: 64
     summary: The left hind and right fore feet. Line 4 illustrates a stride of 18 feet 3 inches, and the order of supporting feet are:-- 1.
    keywords: foot; fore; fore foot; hind foot; left; right
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        item: #7 of 14
          id: 38866
      author: Werge, John, active 1854-1890
       title: The Evolution of Photography With a Chronological Record of Discoveries, Inventions, Etc., Contributions to Photographic Literature, and Personal Reminescences Extending over Forty Years
        date: None
       words: 109740
      flesch: 60
     summary: Mr. Bingham also wrote a valuable manual on the Daguerreotype and other photographic processes, which was published by Geo. At this meeting it was stated that an impression existed, which to some extent still exists, that Mr. Archer was not the originator of the Collodion Process; your Committee, therefore, think it their duty to state emphatically that they are fully satisfied of the great importance of the services rendered by him, as an original inventor, to the art of photography.
    keywords: american; archer; art; artist; attention; background; bromide; business; camera; chloride; collodion; colours; daguerreotype; dark; day; days; dry; effect; england; examples; exhibition; experiments; falls; feet; form; gelatine; glass; good; great; half; interest; john; landscape; left; lens; life; light; london; making; man; means; men; messrs; mind; nature; negatives; new; niépce; north; object; paper; patent; period; photographers; photography; pictures; place; plates; point; portrait; practice; present; printing; prints; process; rapids; river; room; silver; sir; size; society; solution; south; state; street; subject; success; sun; talbot; thought; time; use; view; water; way; white; work; world; years; york
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        item: #8 of 14
          id: 39691
      author: Woodbury, Walter E.
       title: Photographic Amusements, Ninth Edition Including A Description of a Number of Novel Effects Obtainable with the Camera
        date: None
       words: 23255
      flesch: 71
     summary: In making the slits it is a good plan to cut them in thin black paper, and to mount the latter on glass plates. Filter, and coat clean glass plates with this solution, and dry with a gentle heat over a spirit lamp.
    keywords: = =; black; camera; dark; exposure; fig; glass; ground; illustration; image; lens; light; making; method; negative; paper; parts; photography; pictures; piece; plate; solution; time; water; white
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        item: #9 of 14
          id: 40468
      author: Various
       title: The Barnet Book of Photography: A Collection of Practical Articles
        date: None
       words: 78905
      flesch: 63
     summary: All the above-named substances have their partizans; perhaps the greatest favourite being good plate glass free from scratches. The varying exposures for other plates and stops are easily obtained.
    keywords: acid; bath; bromide; camera; carbon; case; colour; developer; development; dish; exposure; fig; film; glass; good; grains; half; hand; illustration; image; lens; lenses; light; minutes; negative; ounces; paper; parts; picture; plate; print; printing; process; solution; surface; time; tissue; toning; transfer; use; water; work; | |
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        item: #10 of 14
          id: 42547
      author: Robinson, H. P. (Henry Peach)
       title: The Art and Practice of Silver Printing
        date: None
       words: 40302
      flesch: 70
     summary: If the background of the figure negative has been painted out, the sky will be represented by white paper; and as white paper skies are neither natural nor pleasing, it will be advisable to sun it down. This is carefully weighed out in the scales, a piece of _filter paper being placed in each pan_.
    keywords: acid; albumen; bath; case; chloride; cut; dry; fig; glass; gold; grains; landscape; light; negative; nitrate; paper; place; print; printing; sheet; silver; silver chloride; silver nitrate; size; sky; solution; surface; time; toning; use; water; white; | |
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        item: #11 of 14
          id: 45714
      author: Talbot, Frederick Arthur Ambrose
       title: Practical Cinematography and Its Applications
        date: None
       words: 58887
      flesch: 62
     summary: With the ordinary type of moving picture camera and process the results are quite misleading. The success of the fly and White Scourge campaigns has resulted in the preparation of other films dealing with the public health, while many local authorities have taken up the idea for the purpose of improving the conditions of their localities.
    keywords: apparatus; box; camera; case; cinematograph; conditions; effect; end; experiments; exposure; feet; film; frame; gate; hand; handle; illustration; institute; lens; life; light; marey; means; mechanism; motion; movement; moving; photography; picture camera; pictures; play; point; record; screen; second; speed; study; subject; system; time; use; water; way; work; worker
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        item: #12 of 14
          id: 63427
      author: Various
       title: The Daguerreian Journal, Vol. I, No. 8, March 1, 1851
        date: None
       words: 23102
      flesch: 67
     summary: One very serious objection to its use is, it cannot, without great care, be made to work with certainty; and another objection is, it will not last long, as the box will require to be replenished after having coated from _eight_ to _fourteen_ plates. (glauber's salt), if the liquid contains lead there will be prevalent a white powder, or precipitate, this powder scarcely dissolves at all in diluted acids, but it dissolves in a solution of caustic of potash: _iron_, mix a solution of the yellow prussiate of potash with a solution of red prussiate, a few drops of this added to a weak solution of muriate of ammonia will produce a blue precipitate; _copper_, pour about half an ounce of the liquid in a test tube, and add to it a few drops of liquid ammonia, if copper is present, the liquid will assume a blue color.
    keywords: acid; ammonia; art; broadway; bromine; chloride; color; daguerreian; daguerreotype; iron; journal; new; number; painting; plates; process; silver; size; solution; street; time; water; york
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        item: #13 of 14
          id: 63428
      author: Various
       title: The Daguerreian Journal, Vol. II, No. 2, June 1, 1851
        date: None
       words: 23258
      flesch: 67
     summary: An iodized _silvered_ plate was exposed to light until brown, and a mercurial plate suspended above it for twelve hours. The wire holding the catch should be so bent that the Daguerreotype plate will stand from one to three inches from, and face the annode, or silver plate.
    keywords: = =; acid; action; blue; broadway; chloride; copper; daguerreian; daguerreotype; film; gold; iodine; light; mercury; new; parts; plate; process; red; silver; silver plate; solution; street; surface; time; water
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        item: #14 of 14
          id: 63517
      author: Humphrey, S. D. (Samuel Dwight)
       title: A Practical Manual of the Collodion Process, Giving in Detail a Method For Producing Positive and Negative Pictures on Glass and Paper.
        date: None
       words: 54819
      flesch: 62
     summary: This plan, however, involving a little additional trouble, is, on that account, often objected to, and, when such is the case, a _concentrated_ solution of hyposulphite of soda must be used, in order to dissolve off the white hyposulphite of silver before it begins to decompose. The test by which the presence of chlorine is detected, either free or in combination with bases, is _nitrate of silver_; it gives a white curdy precipitate of chloride of silver, insoluble in nitric acid, but soluble in ammonia.
    keywords: acid; albumen; alcohol; ammonia; bath; camera; chloride; collodion; cotton; fig; glass; grains; image; iodide; light; negative; nitrate; nitric acid; ounces; paper; photographic; plate; potassium; process; salt; silver; soda; soluble; solution; sulphuric; surface; time; use; water; weight; white
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