User manual

OUTDOOR
EXPOSURE
GUIDE
SUBJECT
STOP
SHUTTER
OPENING
SPEED
----
--
Near-by
landscapes
with
little
or
no
sky.
Near-by
subjects
in
open
field,
J.5.6
1(100
park
or
garden.
Street
scenes.
----
----
Ordinary
landscapes
with
sky,
and
a
j.8
1(100
principal
object
in
the
foreground ..
----
Marine and beach scenes.
Extremely
J.11
1(100
distant landscapes. Mountains. Snow '
scenes
without
prominent dark ob-
--------
jects
in
the
foreground.
J.8
1(250
----
Candid
portraits
in
the
open
shade,
not
J.2.0
1/250
under
trees
or
the
roof of a porch.
or
or
Shaded
near-by
scenes.
J.2.8
1/100
----
Narrow
and
slightly
shaded
streets.
J.4
1/100
----
Moving
objects:
When
photographing
a moving object such as a runner,
J.2.0
1(500
train
or
an
automobile,
the
subject
should be
traveling
towards
or
away
or
or
from
the
camera
at
an
angle
of
about
J.2.8
1(250
45
degrees.
Exposures are for the hours from one hour after sunrise
until
one
hour
before
sunset
on
days
when
the
sun
is shining.
If
pictures
are
made
earlier
or
later,
or
if
it
is a slightly
cloudy
or
hazy
9ay
I
use
a larger
stop
opening.
The
above
exposure
table
is for use with
Kodak
Panatomic
Film.
Kodak
Super
X
Panchromatic
Film is twice
as
fast
as
Kodak
Panatomic
Film
by
daylight,
if
the
films
are
developed
in
Developer
D-76.
For
Kodachrome
Film
follow
the
exposure guide supplied
with
the
film;
do
not
use
the
above
guide.
Kodak
Super
X
Panchromatic
Film
is
about
fifty
per
cent
faster
than
Kodak
Super
Sensitive
Panchromatic
Film
.