User manual
Outdoor 
Ex
posure Guide 
for 
ca
m
eras 
fitte
d 
wi
th 
the 
Kodak 
An
astigmllt 
Lensj
A.5 
tl1'OP 
SHUTTER 
SUBJECT 
OPE:-IING 
SPEED 
:\ea
r
by 
landscapes  sho\ying  little 
or 
no 
sky 
Nearby 
subjects  in 
open  field, 
park 
or 
garden. 
St
r
eet 
scenes. 
Ordinary landscapes 
shO\ying 
sky 
with  a  principal  object 
in 
the 
foreground. 
:\la
l'
ine and  beach scene
s. 
Di
stant 
landscape
s. 
l\lount
ain
s. 
Sno,,' 
scenes  without 
prominent 
dark 
objects in 
the 
foreground. 
Portrait
s  in 
the 
open  s
had
e, 
not 
under 
trees  or 
the 
roof  of  a 
porch.  Shaded 
nearby 
scenes. 
/.11 
f.lG 
/.22 
/.5.6 
/.4.5 
1/
25 
1
/2;) 
1/2;) 
I 1/2.j 
~
l f
:;
() 
/.8 
1/
25 
~ 
arrow 
and 
slight!y 
s_h_a_d
_
e_Ct_s_
rt_r·
e_e_t_s_ 
. . 1
----1-----
.......... 
) r 
':'vi~ects. 
When  photographing  a  moving 
object such as a  runnel', 
train 
or 
an 
automobil
e, 
the 
subject 
should 
be  traveling 
towards 
or 
away 
from 
the 
camera 
at 
an 
angle  of 
about 
45 
degrees. 
f.5
.6 
1/200 
Exposures 
are 
for 
the 
hours  from  one  hour 
after 
sunrise  until one 
hour 
before sun
set 
on 
days 
when 
the 
sun 
is 
shining. 
If 
pictures 
are 
made 
earlier 0
1' 
l
ater 
in 
the 
day, 
or 
if 
it 
is  a  slightly cloudy 
or 
hazy 
day 
use  a 
larger 
stop 
opening. 
This 
table 
is  for 
l(odak 
Veri· 
chrome, 
Super 
Sensitive 
Pan
chro
matic 
a
nd 
Panatom
ic 
Films; 
if 
using 
Kodak 
N  C.  Film,  exposures  can  be 
made 
from 
2}12 
hours  after  sunrise  until 
2}12 
hours 
before sunset. 
Kodak 
Super 
Sensitive 
Panchromatic 
Film  is 
about 
fifty  per 
cent 
faster 
with 
morning 
or 
afte
rnoon  l
ight
, 
than 
Kodak Verichrome Film. 
The 
largest 
stop 
opening  is  f.4.5. 
The 
higher 
the 
number 
the 
smaller 
the 
opening. 
- = 
~ 
l.-










