User manual
Table Of Contents
DEFECTIVE
NEGATIVES.
By following closely the foregoing directions,
the
novice
can
make
seventy-five
per
cent.,
or
upwards, of good negatives. Sometimes, however,
the
directions
are
not
followed,
and
failures result.
To
forewarn the
Kodaker
IS to forearm him,
and
we
therefore
describe
tllC::
.common causes of failure.
CINDER-EXPOSVRS.
Caused
by
making
snap
shots indoors,
or
' in
the
shade,
or
when
the
light is
weak, late
in
the day,
by
closing
the
lens too soon
on
time exposures,
or
the
use of a small stop in the lens when
making
snap shots.
(The
A
Kodak
req
uires
no
stops.)
Under-exposure
is
evidenced
by
slowness
in
the
appearance
of
the
image
in
development,
and
the
absence
of
detail
in
the
shadows.
In
under-exposures
the
sky
appears
black,
in
development,
and
the
rest
of
the
negative
remains
white,
with
no
detail.
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