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ART. 233 - On an Optical Device for the Intensification of Photographic Pictures

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 July 2011

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Summary

Whether from insufficient exposure or from other causes, it not unfrequently happens that a photographic negative is deficient in density, the ratio of light-transmissions for the transparent and opaque parts being too low for effective contrast. In many cases an adequate remedy is found in chemical processes of intensification, but modern gelatine plates do not always lend themselves well to this treatment.

The method now proposed may be described as one of using the negative twice over. Many years ago a pleasing style of portrait was current dependent upon a similar principle. A thin positive transparency is developed upon a collodion plate by acid pyrogallol. Viewed in the ordinary way by holding up to the light, the picture is altogether too faint; but when the film side is placed in contact with paper and the combination viewed by reflected light, the contrast is sufficient. Through the transparent parts the paper is seen with but little loss of brilliancy, while the opaque parts act, as it were, twice over, once before the light reaches the paper, and again after reflexion on its way to the eye. For this purpose it is necessary that the deposit, constituting the more opaque parts of the picture, be of such a nature as not itself to reflect light back to the eye in appreciable degree—a condition very far from being satisfied by ordinary gelatine negatives.

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Scientific Papers , pp. 333 - 335
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009
First published in: 1903

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