Introductory Remarks
1874; Gale Group; Linguagem: English
Autores
C. Piazzi Smyth, Henry Draper, Jabez Hughes, R. J. Mann, J. R. Sawyer, F. H. Wenham, Duncan C. Dallas, W. T. Bovey, Daniel Bendann, Alfred Hughes, H. C. Jennings, W. T. Wilkinson, J. Werge, Samuel Fry, Henry Cooper, Richard Brown, Alfred Pumphrey, John B. Gardner, Joseph Raine, William Bedford, Francis G. Eliot, P. Le Neve Foster, John Nicol, T. C. Roche, W. T. Wilkinson, Thomas Forrest, Mark Oute, John Beattie, Henry Cooper, Colonel Stuart Wortley, George Kemp, Captain J. Waterhouse, J. King, J. G. Tunny, Walter B. Woodbury, H. T. Anthony, W. J. Stillman, W. E. Debenham, A. L. Henderson, J. Emerson Reynolds, George Giberne, F. Beasley Jr., Captain R. O. Aldworth, A. Nicholls, W. H. Davies, W. Harding Warner, J. Phillips, Charles Waldack, E. Dunmore, Peter Mawdsley, B. J. Edwards, Charles Allan Ferneley, J. S. Dismorr, Thomas Gulliver, W. B. Bolton, William Brooks, H. J. Burton, F. York, Wm. Tindill Watson, J. G. Tunny, G. Watmough Webster, H. T. Anthony, E. W. Foxlee, John A. Spencer, O. G. Rejlander, W. Neilson, J. W. Gough, A. Marshall, Henry S. Perkins, Capt. W. De W. Abney, J. Thomson, Thomas Sutton, Benjamin Wyles, W. Griggs, George Hooper, Thomas Gulliver,
ResumoEssay: Patents Connected with Photography Applied for during 1873, Minute Nerve-Structure of the Eye, Strong and Weak Alkaline Developers, &c., An Automatic Syphon, Collodion Half-A-Crown Per Pound!, An Easy Rule for Calculating Combining Quantities in Photographic Chemicals, A New Photo-Engraving Process, How to Avert One of the Perils That Threaten Stored Negatives, Changes in Photographic Fashions, On Strategy!, Down with Alcohol!, Hints, Rapid and Perfect Filtration, On the Want of Sensitive Chemicals and Permanence in Prints, Table of Symbols of the More Important Compounds Used in Photography, Introductory Remarks, Certain Peculiarities in Emulsions, Hints on Winter Photography, Confirmation of Various Results Recorded in the British Journal of Photography for 1873, Mounting and Mounting Materials, Weights and Measures Apothecaries' Weight, Iron Developer, A Stand for Mounting Plans for Copying, A Pocket Camera, Rates of Postage for Inland Letters, Concerning Redevelopment, A Simple Swing-Back for Large Cameras, Photography an Aid to Sociology, Scene in a Glasshouse, Imitation Opal Glass, Acetic Acid as an Accelerator, Ten Years' Experience with the Lime Toning Bath, Photographing below Zero, A Simple Developing-Stand, Lantern Lectures, Old Collodion.— Iron Developer.— Hot Water.— Sugar.— Varieties, Photography— the Fashion, On Photographic Colouring, A New Method of Combination Printing, The Usefulness of Blotting-Paper in Photography, Photometery, or the Measurement of Light, A Cursory Glance at Photography in America, What Is "Life Size?", Testing Baths and Precipitating Silver, A Hint to Contributors, On Diffraction Spectrum Photography, How to Make a Rapid Negative Bath, Table for Enlargements, A Word on Tents in General, and One in Particular, Trays and Baths, Practical Instructions for Preparing Gelatino-Bromide Plates, An Easy Method of Printing on Canvas, Impurities in Bromides, Useful Formulæ Iron Developer, Art in Photography, and Photography in Art, Transparencies for the Magic Lantern without the Aid of Photography, Howard's Tent, Remarks on the Stereoscopic Effect of Distant Views, A Simplification of Photography, On the Use of Wide-Angled Rectilinear Lenses, Crayon Painting Applied to Albumenised Photographs, Optical Helps to "Rapido-Manie", Albumenised Plates and the Use of Hard Water, On the Preservation of Negatives and on Varnishing, On the Treatment of the Silver Printing Bath, Photographs on Enamel, Development of Gelatino-Bromide Plates and Paper, Recording Public Events, A Substitute for Albumen as a Preliminary Coating, Cutting Prints, The Fothergill Process, Another String of Old Beads, The Present State of Photography, A Day with a Collographic Printer, Landscape Photography, Thermometer Scales, A New Method of Developing Dry Plates, Art Backgrounds Versus Artificial Backgrounds, Summary of Photographic Progress during 1873 New Methods for Testing the Nitrate Bath, How to Make a Gelatine Emulsion, Improving the Lighting of a Studio, Printing with the Salts of Iron, To Silver Paper Which Will Keep Well and Produce Brilliant Prints, How I Nearly Became a "Great Inventor", Table of the Symbols and Atomic Weights of the Elements, On Staining the Collodion Film, Notes on Strong Alkaline Developers, A Practical Method for Preserving Sensitised Paper. Fiction, drama: Chapter VII.— Swing Backs and Swing Fronts, Chapter IV.— Carte Cameras, Chapter VIII.— Cameras for Dry Plates, Chapter VI.— Instantaneous Shutters, Cameras— Ancient and Modern Their Construction, Peculiarities, and Uses, Chapter V.— Stereoscopic Cameras, Chapter II.— the Expanding Camera, Chapter I.— the Simple Camera, Chapter III.— Portable and Bellows Cameras.
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