User manual

EXPOSURES
FOR
INTERIORS
BY
DAYLIGHT
I t
is
easy to
make
pictures
of
interiors
by
daylight
where
the
windows get
direct
light
from
the
sky.
To
make
a
picture
of
a
room
interior
by
daylight,
adjust
the
sh
utter
for a
"bu
l
b"
exposure, see
page
22,
and
set the lens
atf
/ r6; this
opening
gives
the
best
average
results.
When
the
Kodak
is
on
a table,
do
not
place it
more
than
two
or
three
inches from
the
edge,
or
the
table
will show
in
the
picture
.
Compose
the
picture
in
the
finder,
including
more
of
the
floor
of
the
room
than
of
the
ceiling.
Leave
the
furniture
in
the
room
in
its
usual
place,
as far as possible,
but
be
sure
there
are
no
pieces
close to
the
camera
lens.
Focus
the
Kodak
for
the
average
distance be-
tween
the
objects
in
the
room
and
the
camera.
For
an
interior
with
medium-colored
walls
and
furnishings
and
two windows,
with
the
sun
shining,
make
an
exposure of
about
4
seconds
with
stopf
/
r6
and
Kodak
Verichrome
or
Plus-X
Panchromatic
Film.
With
one
window
double
the
exposure,
and
if
there
are
more
than
two windows, halve
the
exposure.
If
the
day
is
cloudy,
make
an
exposure
of
8
seconds
to
r 6 seconds.
No
definite
ru
le
can
be given for all
inter
iors
because of
the
great
variety
of
light
conditions.
It
is
28