Suche löschen...
The photographic news
- Bandzählung
- 14.1870
- Erscheinungsdatum
- 1870
- Sprache
- Englisch
- Signatur
- F 135
- Vorlage
- Hochschule für Grafik und Buchkunst Leipzig
- Digitalisat
- Hochschule für Grafik und Buchkunst Leipzig
- Digitalisat
- SLUB Dresden
- Lizenz-/Rechtehinweis
- Public Domain Mark 1.0
- URN
- urn:nbn:de:bsz:14-db-id1780948042-187000001
- PURL
- http://digital.slub-dresden.de/id1780948042-18700000
- OAI
- oai:de:slub-dresden:db:id-1780948042-18700000
- Sammlungen
- LDP: Historische Bestände der Hochschule für Grafik und Buchkunst Leipzig
- Fotografie
- Strukturtyp
- Band
- Parlamentsperiode
- -
- Wahlperiode
- -
- Digitalisat
- SLUB Dresden
- Strukturtyp
- Ausgabe
- Parlamentsperiode
- -
- Wahlperiode
- -
-
Zeitschrift
The photographic news
-
Band
Band 14.1870
-
- Titelblatt Titelblatt -
- Sonstiges Preface -
- Ausgabe No. 592, January 7, 1870 1
- Ausgabe No. 593, January 14, 1870 13
- Ausgabe No. 594, January 21, 1870 25
- Ausgabe No. 595, January 28, 1870 37
- Ausgabe No. 596, February 4, 1870 49
- Ausgabe No. 597, February 11, 1870 61
- Ausgabe No. 598, February 18, 1870 73
- Ausgabe No. 599, February 25, 1870 85
- Ausgabe No. 600, March 4, 1870 97
- Ausgabe No. 601, March 11, 1870 109
- Ausgabe No. 602, March 18, 1870 121
- Ausgabe No. 603, March 25, 1870 133
- Ausgabe No. 604, April 1, 1870 145
- Ausgabe No. 605, April 8, 1870 157
- Ausgabe No. 606, April 14, 1870 169
- Ausgabe No. 607, April 22, 1870 181
- Ausgabe No. 608, April 29, 1870 193
- Ausgabe No. 609, May 6, 1870 205
- Ausgabe No. 610, May 13, 1870 217
- Ausgabe No. 611, May 20, 1870 229
- Ausgabe No. 612, May 27, 1870 241
- Ausgabe No. 613, June 3, 1870 253
- Ausgabe No. 614, June 10, 1870 265
- Ausgabe No. 615, June 17, 1870 277
- Ausgabe No. 616, June 24, 1870 289
- Ausgabe No. 617, July 1, 1870 301
- Ausgabe No. 618, July 8, 1870 313
- Ausgabe No. 619, July 15, 1870 325
- Ausgabe No. 620, July 22, 1870 337
- Ausgabe No. 621, July 29, 1870 349
- Ausgabe No. 622, August 5, 1870 361
- Ausgabe No. 623, August 12, 1870 373
- Ausgabe No. 624, August 19, 1870 385
- Ausgabe No. 625, August 26, 1870 397
- Ausgabe No. 626, September 2, 1870 409
- Ausgabe No. 627, September 9, 1870 421
- Ausgabe No. 628, September 16, 1870 433
- Ausgabe No. 629, September 23, 1870 445
- Ausgabe No. 630, September 30, 1870 457
- Ausgabe No. 631, October 7, 1870 469
- Ausgabe No. 632, October 14, 1870 481
- Ausgabe No. 633, October 21, 1870 493
- Ausgabe No. 634, October 28, 1870 505
- Ausgabe No. 635, November 4, 1870 517
- Ausgabe No. 636, November 11, 1870 529
- Ausgabe No. 637, November 18, 1870 541
- Ausgabe No. 638, November 25, 1870 553
- Ausgabe No. 639, December 2, 1870 565
- Ausgabe No. 640, December 9, 1870 577
- Ausgabe No. 641, December 16, 1870 589
- Ausgabe No. 642, December 23, 1870 601
- Ausgabe No. 643, December 30, 1870 613
- Register Index 619
-
Band
Band 14.1870
-
- Titel
- The photographic news
- Autor
- Links
- Downloads
- Einzelseite als Bild herunterladen (JPG)
-
Volltext Seite (XML)
THE PHOTOGRAPHIC NEWS. Vol. XIV. No. 592.—January 7, 1870. CONTENTS. PAGE Photography During the Past Year 1 Photo-mechanical Printing 2 Chemical “ Halation” in Eclipse Photographs 3 One Print from Two Negatives 3 Photography in America 4 Foreign Miscellanea 5 Forthcoming French Photographic Exhibition 6 How to Clean Plates. By B. J. Edwards 6 Transferring Films. By David Duncan 7 PAGE Lighting the Sitter, or Producing Effects in Portraiture on ly. By Robert Gillo 7 Landscape Photography. By William Brooks 8 Correspondence — Enlargements by the Magic Lantern- Bleached Lac in Varnishes—Hot Water Pipes in Studios— Rowsell’s Graphoscope— Dr. Monckho ven’s Reply to Mr. Thomas Barrett 9 Proceedings of Societies—Amateur Photographic Association.., 30 Talk in the Studio 11 To Correspondents 11 PIIOTOGRAPHY DURING THE PAST YEAR. A retrospective glance over a year's history is always interesting and instructive, and it is pleasant to add, in relation to the twelve months just completed, the examina tion affords several sources of satisfaction. In many respects the photographic year has been marked by distinct progress. During the three decades which have elapsed since its discovery as a practical art, it has seen many phases of change and advancement. But of late the keen thirst for novelty, the eager interest in experiment, of a sometimes vague, and not unfrequently empirical, charac ter, has largely past away. But whilst new processes are less numerous, the tendency of experiment, it is satisfactory to note, is to secure practical ends. In the actual dis coveries of the year there is real gain, and the domain of photography has been both enriched and extended. Of primary importance is the advancement made in permanent printing. The old and just reproach of photo graphy, the unstable character of its productions, has lost its force. Apart from the improvements made in methods of silver printing, whereby increased permanency is secured, various methods now exist of obtaining photographic im pressions, lacking no point of excellence, and of absolutely unchallengeable stability. Chief amongst the improve ments of the year in this direction is the improved carbon process of Mr. Johnson. A few years ago Mr. Swan made perfect carbon printing in half tone commercially practicable; this year Mr. Johnson has made it easy and cheap, without sacrificing any jot of beauty or excellence; and, we may add, still greater improvements in the process will shortly be announced in our columns. Mr. Window has announced the discovery of another method of producing carbon photographs, which for special purposes possesses great promise, and is, we understand, unusually simple, and easy in practice. The publication of Mr. Blair’s pamphlet must have given feesh stimulus to many carbon experimentalists, although, Vs yet, we have heard but little of their labours. The method of producing carbon pictures without transfer, by means of a tissue rendered temporarily transparent at the back, first suggested by Mr. Swan some years ago, has appeared twice during the year as an independent discovery : it has been pub lished by Mr. Blair, and included in a specification by Mr. Bouncy. The examples of work done in this way with which we have been favoured by Mr. Blair have suggested that for amateur purposes this plan possesses many advantages. Photo-mechanical printing processes have made great progress during the year. The results of Herr Albert, of Munich, by a method analogous to photo-lithography, in which a layer of bichromated gelatine exposed under a negative acquires the property of repelling water, and receiving a coating of fatty ink, in the exact , ratio of the action of light, far surpasses in excellence anything hitherto produced by analogous modes of printing. The process, so far as we can learn, is essentially practical, and the plates yield a large number of impressions. The success of Herr Albert has stimulated many other experimentalists in a similar direction, many of them with considerable promise, but none at present nearly approaching in excellence to the most successful of the Alberttypes. In photo-block pinting Mr. Dallas has continued to make progress, and has produced some very good results in line and stipple. . Bhoto-bloek printing of subjects direct from nature docs not appear to make progress, nor at present to afford much hope of success. A new process of photo mechanical printing, by Messrs. Edwards and Kidd, the details of which have not yet appeared, seems to possess considerable promise. Mr. Woodbury’s method of photo relief printing has made some progress, and maintains its distinctive excellence, amongst photo-mechanical pro cesses, of producing the most perfect analogue of the sun-picture proper, which has ever been obtained by mechanical means. Ceramic photography has excited considerable attention during the year, and various experimentalists have been engaged upon it. Mr. Henderson has attained the highest excellence in this country, many of his enamel miniatures being absolutely perfect in delicacy, force, gradation, and tone. His method, however, remains a secret. Silver printing processes have made some progress, less in relation to results than to means. Permanent sensitive albuminized papers of real excellence have taken a place in commerce, and offer many advantages, especially to amateurs. Collodio-chloride printing has made some progress : the method of fuming the film has been found a valuable improvement. Camera-printing on wet collodion has been successfully practised during the year. The ordinary wet collodion negative process has not undergone much change during the year. Some attention has been given to the use of alkaline or neutral nitrate baths, as a means of attaining increased sensitiveness, and negatives which do not require intensifying. Mr. Blanchard has secured some very encouraging results in this direction. The use of washed wet plates has con tinued to be successfully practised. The golden syrup solu tion, for preserving plates moist exposed and developed in the field, with a view to finishing at home, has also come into more general use. In dry plate processes there has been but little change. The gum-gallic process of Mr. Gordon has become the general favourite, and has yielded, in the hands of many photographers, very fine negatives. Mr. England has used it extensively during the summer, and brought home from Switzerland some hundreds of very fine negatives by
- Aktuelle Seite (TXT)
- METS Datei (XML)
- IIIF Manifest (JSON)