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Towler, John. The Silver Sunbeam.
Joseph H. Ladd, New York: 1864. Electronic edition prepared from
facsimile edition of Morgan and Morgan, Inc., Hastings-on-Hudson,
New York. Second printing, Feb. 1974. ISBN 871000-005-9
Chapter XXVII.
COLLODION NEGATIVES OR POSITIVES COPIED FROM COLLODION OR PAPER
POSITIVES.
IN this chapter will be described the method of copying
photographic or typographic prints. Three things are absolutely
requisite in order to secure a good copy; these are, as before, a
good lens, good light, sharp focussing.
For the purpose of copying I invariably use the full blaze of
the sun. Some artists pretend that the system is false. They
take their ideas from the effects produced on solid objects, where
the contrasts are so immensely exaggerated; and they do not bear in
mind that on a flat surface there can be no shadows, because there
are no prominences. All the contrast that can possibly be obtained
in the copy, exists already in the original.
Upon a light built table or board, two inches wider than the
camera, nail down on either side a ledge of wood, within which the
camera can slide longitudinally. At one foot's distance from one end
erect a piece of board of the same width as the long board, and a
foot high; let it be fixed perpendicular to the board and to the
direction of the ledges, by means of triangular braces near the end
of the long board. On the side fronting the camera, construct two
beveled ledges, one on either side, perpendicular to the base-board,
of half-inch material; within this a piece of half inch board, six
inches wide, is correctly adjusted by planing, so as to slide up and
down with facility; on its surface on either side is a similar
bevelled ledge running horizontally, in which another thin piece is
made to slide with ease. This last piece is the holder of the print
to be copied. By the construction it will be seen that the holder
admits of motion vertically and horizontally, and that thus the
print can be accurately adjusted in a correct position in front of
the lens, so that the center of the print and the axis of the lens
coincide. The print, too, will thus be parallel with the ground
glass in the camera. Small slips of tin plate are screwed on the
surface of the holder, in order to clamp down the print, and to
prevent any unevenness on its surface by cockling from the heat.
Pins or tacks are inadmissible here, because of the shadows produced
by them on the print to be copied. As soon as this mechanical
contrivance is complete, slide the camera up to the holder, and
adjust the latter so as to bring its center in front of the cap of
the lens, and with a pencil draw a circle around the cap and upon
the surface of the holder. Whilst the slides are in this position,
mark the vertical and the horizontal slide, so that at any time
afterward the holder can be brought into position with great
facility. The holder is now taken out, and the print to be copied is
fixed, so that its center coincides as near as can be with the
center of the circle; it is placed upside down, so that its four
boundaries are vertical and horizontal. Now slide the print-holder
into its place, and slide back the camera until the. picture on the
ground glass is of an exactly equal size with the original. A
microscope is required in this operation, in order to focus with the
utmost accuracy. Do not despise the microscope, it is almost
indispensable. Focus whilst the sun is shining upon the picture. Use
a very small stop. Let the sun shine from one side slightly, with
your back turned toward this orb. The most agreeable time to copy by
this method is early in the morning; the light is then clear, and by
turning the table on one side, the rays illumine the object very
brilliantly, and without any haze; turn the table always so that no
shadow of the camera or lens falls upon the object. As long as the
sun shines, you can thus copy, and copy perfectly; the morning hours
being personally more agreeable, photographically perhaps not as
effective as toward noon. The time of exposure will vary according
to the power of the lens, the size of the diaphragm, and the
magnitude of the copy. With a lens of three inches focus, of C.C.
Harrison's manufacture, with a diaphragmatic aperture of one third
of an inch, and when the copy is equal to the original, an exposure
of fifteen seconds will produce a rich negative. The same conditions
remaining, the one fourth orthoscopic lens of Voightlaender, whose
focus is about twelve inches, will require an exposure of between
two and three minutes to produce the same effect.
By the first-named lens, an ambrotype or melainotype will require
only two or three seconds.
By adhering cautiously to the rules prescribed, and above all
things by very accurate focussing, and by taking care that the
surface of the photograph, plate, or print is perfectly smooth, and
in a plane parallel with the ground glass, copies can be obtained
that can scarcely be distinguished from the originals. But a very
slight undulation on the surface of the print, or deviation from
parallelism is sensibly observable when the conjugate foci are
equal, and much more so when the copy is amplified. The camera, when
once adjusted for the day, is strapped down firmly to the board, so
that the conditions of focussing can not be altered by inserting the
tablet, etc. It is necessary to cover the whole camera, and
especially the posterior opening, with a dark cloth, lest a single
ray might penetrate into the interior. Close the lens always with
the cap before you take out or put in the slide, because it is
easier to move the cap than the slide. After the slide has been
taken out, wait until all oscillation or vibration has ceased,
before you remove the cap. Perform all your motions in this
operation firmly, but with gentleness, not roughly and in haste.
Whilst the ground glass is out, place it where no reflection can
interfere with the print to be copied. The board on which the camera
slides, as also all the other parts, had better be stained black, or
of some neutral tint.
If the light of the sun could be directed through a long
cylindrical opening, and then applied directly to the illumination
of the print, without interference from reflections in all
directions, the operation would be neater and more effectual.
Where copying has to be performed by diffused light, this light
must be small in quantity, proceeding from a single pane of glass,
as reflected from a white cloud or a white sheet, and all
reflections must be carefully avoided. The management of the light
in copying is reduced to very simple conditions-a single
light is all that is required-no more contrast is required; see that
none is communicated by unnecessary and extraneous shadows from
neighboring bodies, caused by secondary light. A single light, where
there are no bodies in its direction to the print, will produce no
shadow, consequently all shadows must proceed from secondary lights;
shut up, therefore, every aperture, excepting the one which is to
illumine the print or type to be copied. These precautions will
bring with them success; the neglect of them will cause you to quit
copying with disgust for want of success.
With such a contracted light, the illumination can not by any
means approach that produced by the direct rays of the sun; the
consequence will be firstly the necessity of using a large
diaphragm, and of thus diminishing the sharpness of the copy; and,
secondly, of increasing the length of the exposure. The difference
of illumination in copying and in direct portraiture is very
distinct; for the latter purpose a single light without reflection
will not, can not succeed; whereas for copying, more lights than one
would be not only so much more than sufficient, but at the same time
probably in most cases injurious. Do not, therefore, confound the
two operations, and blame the light for your mismanagement of it,
for in nine cases out of ten your want of success is to be
attributed to this mismanagement.
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