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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 XXXVIII.
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| Focus of Lens. |
Reduction Distances. |
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | Enlargement Distances. | ||
| Inches | Inches | Inches | Inches | Inches | Inches | Inches | Inches | Inches | Inches | ||||
| 1 | O. I. S. |
2 2 4 |
3 1½ 4½ |
4 1 1/8 5 1/8 |
5 1¼ 6¼ |
6 1 1/5 7 1/5 |
7 1 1/6 8 1/6 |
8 1 /17 9 1/7 |
9 1 1/8 10 1/8 |
10 1 /19 11 1/9 |
I. O. S. | ||
| 1½. | O. I. S. |
3 3 6 |
4½ 2¼ 6¾ |
6 2 8 |
7½ 1 7/8 9 3/8 |
9 1 4/5 10 3/5 |
10½ 1¾ 14¼ |
12 1 5/7 13 5/7 |
13½ 1 11/16 15 3/16 |
15 1 6/9 16 2/3 |
I. O. S. | ||
| 2 | O. I. S. |
4 4 8 |
6 3 9 |
8 2 2/3 10 2/3 |
10 2½ 12½ |
12 2 2/5 14 2/5 |
14 1 1/8 16 1/8 |
16 2 2/7 18 2/7 |
18 2¼ 20¼ |
20 2 2/9 22 2/9 |
I. O. S. | ||
| 2½ | O. I. S. |
5 5 10 |
7½ 3¾ 11¼ |
10 3 1/8 15 5/8 |
12½ 3 1/8 15 5/8 |
15 3 18 |
17½ 2 11/12 20 5/12 |
20 2 6/7 22 6/7 |
22½ 2 13/16 25 5/16 |
25 2 7/9 27 7/9 |
I. O. S. | ||
| 3 | O. I. S. |
6 6 12 |
9 4½ 13½ |
12 4 16 |
15 3¾ 18¾ |
18 3 /3/5 21 3/5 |
21 3 3/7 24½ |
24 3 3/7 27 3/7 |
27 3 3/8 10 3/8 |
30 3 1/8 33 1/8 |
I. O. S. | ||
| 3½ | O. I. S. |
7 7 14 |
10½ 5¼ 15¾ |
14 4 2/3 16 2/3 |
17½ 4¾ 22¼ |
21 4 1/5 25 1/5 |
24½ 4 1/12 28 7/12 |
28 4 32 |
31½ 3 15/16 15 7/16 |
35 3 8/9 38 3/9 |
I. O. S. | ||
| 4 | O. I. S. |
8 8 16 |
12 6 18 |
16 5¼ 21¼ |
20 5 25 |
24 4 4/5 28 4/5 |
28 4 2/3 32 2/3 |
32 4 4/2 36 4/7 |
36 4½ 4-½ |
40 4 4/9 44 4/9 |
I. O. S. | ||
| 4½ | O. I. S. |
9 9 18 |
13½ 6¾ 20¼ |
18 6 24 |
22½ 5 5/8 22 1/8 |
27 5 2/5 32 2/5 |
31½ 5 ¼ 36¾ |
36 5 1/7 41 1/7 |
40½ 5 1/6 45 9/16 |
45 5 50 |
I. O. S. | ||
| 5 | O. I. S. |
10 10 20 |
15 7½ 22½ |
20 6 2/3 26 2/3 |
25 6¼ 31¼ |
30 6 36 |
35 5 5/6 40 5/6 |
40 5 5/7 45 5/7 |
45 5 5/8 50 5/8 |
50 5/59 55 5/9 |
I. O. S. | ||
| 5½ | O. I. S. |
11 11 22 |
16½ 8¼ 24¾ |
22 7 1/3 29 1/3 |
27½ 6 7/8 34 3/8 |
33 6½ 39½ |
38½ 6 5/12 44 11/12 |
44 6 2/7 5- 2/7 |
49½ 6 3/16 55 11/ |
55 6 1/9 61 1/9 |
I. O. S. | ||
| 6 | O. I. S. |
12 12 24 |
18 9 27 |
24 8 32 |
30 7½ 37½ |
36 7 1/6 43 1/6 |
42 7 49 |
48 6 6/4 54 6/7 |
54 6¾ 60¾ |
60 6 2/3 66 2/3 |
I. O. S. | ||
| 6½ | O. I. S. |
13 13 26 |
19½ 9¾ 29¼ |
26 8 2/3 34 2/3 |
32½ 8 1/8 40 5/8 |
39 7 4/5 46 4/5 |
45½ 7 7/12 53 1/12 |
52 7 3/7 59 3/7 |
58½ 7 5/16 65 13/16 |
65 7 2/9 72 2/9 |
I. O. S. | ||
| 7 | O. I. S. |
14 14 28 |
21 10½ 31½ |
28 9 1/3 37 1/3 |
35 8¾ 43¾ |
42 8 2/5 50 2/5 |
49 8 1/6 57 1/6 |
56 8 64 |
63 7 7/8 70 7/8 |
70 7 7/9 77 7/9 |
I. O. S. | ||
| 7.5 | O. I. S. |
15 15 30 |
22½ 11¼ 33¾ |
30 10 40 |
37 ½ 9 3/8 46 7/8 |
45 9 54 |
52½ 8¾ 61¼ |
60 8 4/7 68 4/7 |
67½ 8 7/16 75 15/16 |
75 8 1/8 83 1/8 |
I. O. S. | ||
| 8 | O. I. S. |
16 16 32 |
24 12 36 |
32 10 2/3 42 2/3 |
40 10 50 |
48 9 3/5 57 3/5 |
56 9 1/8 65 1/8 |
64 9 1/7 73 1/7 |
72 9 81 |
80 8 8/9 88 1/9 |
I. O. S. | ||
| 8.5 | O. I. S. |
17 17 34 |
25½ 11 1/8 45 1/8 |
67 11 1/8 45 1/8 |
42½ 10 5/8 53 1/8 |
51 10 1/5 61 1/5 |
59½ 9 7/12 69 1/12 |
68 9 5/7 77 5/7 |
76½ 9 9/16 86 1/16 |
85 9 4/9 94 4/9 |
I. O. S. | ||
| 9 | O. I. S. |
18 18 36 |
27 13½ 40½ |
36 12 48 |
45 11¼ 56¼ |
54 10 4/5 64 4/5 |
63 10½ 73½ |
7210 2/7 82 2/7 |
81 10 1/8 91 1/8 |
90 10 100 |
I. O. S. | ||
| 9.51 | O. I. S. |
19 19 38 |
28½ 144 42¾ |
38 12 2/3 50 2/3 |
47½ 11 7/8 59 3/8 |
57 11 2/5 68 2/5 |
66½ 11 1/12 77 7/12 |
76 10 6/7 86 6/7 |
85½ 10 11/16 96 3/16 |
95 10 5/9 105 5/9 |
I. O. S. | ||
If the equivalent focus or principal focal length of a combination be known, it is very easy to arrange the object to be photographed, the camera and the screen, so as to produce a picture so many times larger or smaller than the object, as may be required; for instance, let the focal length of the combination be 4½ inches, what must be the conditions of the three things, object, combination, and ground glass, so as to obtain an image eight times larger than the object?
Look for 4½ in the first vertical column, and for 8 on the first horizontal line; where these two columns meet will be found all that is required. in the first place the object and the ground glass must be 45 9/16 inches apart, the ground glass is 40½ inches from the middle of the combination, and the object is consequently 5 1/16 inches from the same point.
If we wish to diminish the size of the picture eight times, then the two latter of the above terms are inverted, the object being 45 9/16 from the center of the combination, and the image only 5 1/16 inches from the same point.
The table can be extended as far as desired, by using the multiples of the numbers already given. If we required the conditions for 15 inches focus, multiply those along column 5 by 3, the results will be the conditions required.
This branch comprehends the mode of taking photographs of microscopic or almost invisible objects, as also of amplification by means of the solar camera. in either case means are resorted to by which light can be concentrated or condensed on the object or collodion positive to be copied, and enlarged or diminished. These means are combinations of plane reflectors, concave reflectors, double convex or piano-convex lenses. the appendages to the solar camera and to the solar microscope are facsimiles of each other; but the solar microscope existed before photography had been elicited from chaos; the solar camera, therefore, is a mere imitation of its antecedent; the patentees of the latter instrument, then, can make no claim to originality of design; their only claim can be the application of the instrument to photography.
The appendages to the solar microscope, that is, the condensing part of the apparatus, consist in the first place of a plane mirror in the form of a rectangle, whose width is at least equal to the diameter of the plane-convex or double convex lens, which condenses the light received from the mirror. the length of the mirror must be about four times its width. At one end there is a hinge-joint, which allows the mirror to swing on the same like a door. the hinge is fixed to a circle of brass or other metal, which, by means of a dentated periphery, admits of a circular motion. By this contrivance it will be seen that the mirror has two motions at right angles to each other; for instance, supposing the back of the mirror faced the sun at noon, and were perpendicular to the horizon, then one of the motions mentioned would cause the mirror to incline toward the sun, until finally it would be flat on the horizon. the other motion permits the mirror to move either toward the East or the West; so that, as it now stands, if moved toward the West, the silvered surface would face the setting sun. By combining these two motions consentaneously, the mirror can always be so inclined as to reflect the rays of the sun from rising to setting into the axis of the condenser. the two motions in question are effected by means of screws and pinion-wheels, etcetera.
The part just described might be a concave mirror admitting of the same motions; this would act as a reflector and condenser at the same time. the condenser is fixed in the brass plate which is attached to the window-shutter, and around the condenser the metallic ring moves, to which the hinge of the mirror is attached. the object of this part of the apparatus is, by refraction, to cause the large bundle of parallel rays that impinge upon its surface, to be condensed from a cylindrical into a conical form, so that at a given distance this converging and condensed light will arrive at its apex or focus.
Now, at this focus, all the light that has passed through the lens will be concentrated; and at a variable distance, before it arrives at this focus, it will cover a variable space, varying from a point or zero upward to an amount equal to the surface of the lens.
The amount of condensation will be the ratio between the squares of the distances from the focal point; thus, suppose the focal distance be twelve inches, and that we intercept the cone of light at three inches from the focus; then by dividing the square of twelve by the square of three we obtain the ratio, which is sixteen, and this indicates that the light at this distance is sixteen times more intense than it was when it first immerged from the lens.
The object of the refracting lens, therefore, is to illumine the object with light. This is the primary view of the matter, but it does more than this; each ray from the condenser not only illumines each point on the transparent object upon which it impinges, but on emergence after refraction it passes on modified by the medium through which it has penetrated, and carries, so to say, this part of the picture with it; the cone of modified light is in fact the picture set in motion, and so directed as to strike the surface of the camera-lens which is next to it. These rays are convergent, and are each the axis of an independent cone of divergent rays from each illumined point of the transparent negative. Some photographers maintain that the axes alone (that is, the rays that constitute the cone of light from the condenser) are available, and that the divergent rays around each axis are of no avail. This, however, is a mistake, and is equivalent to saying that, if an opaque object were illumined by a condenser or reflector, the picture could be taken only by focussing the cone or the beam of reflected light; whereas we know full well in copying that the rays that enter the camera through the lens, and that go to the formation of the picture, can not be any of the reflected rays, because these are perpendicular to the surface of the copy, and would indicate that the impingent rays were also perpendicular, which is an impossibility, owing to the opacity of the camera and its tube, which occlude all perpendicular rays. On the contrary, each illumined point becomes a new radiant, from which proceeds a divergent pencil of rays, of which many around the axis are refracted by the lens and brought to a focus on the other side.
If the condensing lens be achromatic, the light will be white; if not achromatic, it will produce spectral colors, of which some are useless in photography, whilst others are exactly those which are needed. Now the scientific optician can arrange his non-achromatic condenser in such a manner, in reference to the lens and the negative, as to make use only of the violet light, or the actinic part of the spectrum, for the formation of the picture. the focus of the violet or actinic light is shorter than that of the luminous or yellow part.
The next appendage to the solar microscope is the object-holder, which has a sliding motion to or from the condenser, in the neighborhood of the focus, by which means the object can be placed in a condensed part of the cone of light, which is just sufficient to cover it and no more, a contrivance by which light is economized.
The remaining part of the instrument is the microscope proper, which contains the corrected objective for magnifying the object.
Now the above description is precisely the same as that of the condensing part of the solar camera. With such an arrangement of mirrors and refractors, the camera and screen may remain fixed during the whole time of the operation.
Another arrangement for concentrating light is accomplished by means of reflectors fixed in the form of a frustum of a pyramid. But in the application of this contrivance the camera and screens must all move together on a universal joint, like a heliostat, by which means the silvered surfaces of the reflectors can always be preserved in front of the sun, so as to catch his rays, (as described in a previous chapter of this work.)
The mode of using the solar microscope and the solar camera is in no wise different, excepting that in the former a transparent object is substituted in the holder for the transparent collodion negative in the latter. Each is placed in the cone of condensed light, in order to be brilliantly illumined, and in such a position, in reference to the objective or photographic lens, as to bring the focus of the actinic rays immediately on the optical center of the last or front lens of the combination. It is by this means alone that the best enlarged picture can be obtained.
It appears then that the lens may not be placed in any position for maximum effect; the true position depends upon the power of the condenser, in combination with the power of the posterior lens of the tube, where such is used. There must be a relative connection between these two powers; but this is not maintained in any of the solar cameras in the market, from the fact that tubes are not considered as parts of the solar camera; operators are consequently left to apply whatever combination they may have on hand; we must therefore avail ourselves of what is next best, and fix the combination where the maximum effect can be obtained with given materials.
Knowing the length of the principal focus of the condenser and its diameter, as well as that of the compound lens from the posterior lens, the mathematician can easily calculate how much the former focus will be shortened by the interposition of the tube. Supposing, for instance, the diameter of the condenser be eight inches, and its focal length be twelve inches, then the angle which the side of the cone of condensed light makes with the diameter will be 71° '.23 Moreover, let the diameter of the posterior lens be two inches, and the focal length from the back lens two inches, then the angle formed between the side of its cone and the diameter will be 63° 45'. That is, if the rays entered the combination parallel, they would form a cone, of which the outside ray would have this angle with the diameter of the back lens. But, being interposed in the cone of condensed light, of which the rays are convergent, the tendency of the combination is to shorten the focal length, by reducing angle 63° 45' to 56° 00', the difference between these angles being the same difference that exists between 71° 32' and 63° 45'. As the angle diminishes, so will the focal length of the cone of condensed light be diminished, and in the present instance to the amount of half an inch.
Besides this, we have to reduce this distance still more, in order to find the actinic focus, which the mathematical optician can easily find.
But the generality of photographers are not supposed to be in a condition to deduce the requisite corrections in this way; we must therefore show by practical means how we can approximate to the same results.
Ascertain the focal length of the condenser by finding the distance of its burning point from the glass; then, when the tube is screwed out to the extent of its play, measure the distance from the face-plate, in which the tube is fastened, to the front lens; subtract this distance from the focal length of the condenser, the difference will give the distance of the condenser to the outside of the camera nearly, or to the part upon which the face-plate of the tube is to be screwed. More accurately the same result can be obtained by interposing the tube in the condensed light, and by moving it backward and forward, until the focal or burning point is just on the outside of the front lens; let an assistant measure this distance from the outside of the camera, and at this distance fix the tube permanently. Whilst doing this the greatest care is required to make the axis of the condenser coincide with the axis of the tube.
This is the first rude adjustment. the second adjustment consists in bringing the actinic focus so as to coincide with the optic center of the front lens. Screw back the sliding part of the tube and turn on the sun; the luminous focus will be quite visible in the dark space behind the camera. Now insert a piece of deep violet-colored glass between the condenser and the objective, so as to intercept all the colors of the luminous cone, excepting the violet, and ascertain where the violet cone comes to a focus; screw the tube out until this focus is just in front of the anterior glass; then, knowing the thickness of the front lens, advance the tube until the blue focus is in the middle of the front lens, and let this be the final and permanent adjustment of the tube in reference to the condenser. Mark this position by a line on the brass work, in order that the tube can be adjusted at a moment's notice when required to be used.
The negative-holder is movable by means of a screw, so that it can be brought into focus upon any screen on the other side of the tube. Whenever this operation of focussing is to be performed, insert the violet-colored glass, so as to focus in reference to actinism, and not to luminosity. By this means the luminous picture on the screen (that is, when the violet-colored glass is removed) may not be quite sharp, but the printed picture on the paper will be sharp and beautifully defined. The same mode of proceeding may be followed with the ordinary camera, where there is any doubt of the correction of the tube for actinism. Place in front of the tube a piece of violet-colored glass every time you focus.
The size of the negative will have to depend on the diameter of the condenser; if this be nine inches, a one-sixth plate will be large enough, the object being to get the negative as near the apex of the cone of concentrated light as possible, and in such a position as to be totally covered by the cone.
The negative suitable for the solar camera must be very bright, well defined and quite clear. The glass must be thin, perfectly flat, or in the same plane and homogeneous. The negative effect need not, in fact, must not be carried on to the same extent as for positive printing; it is but a trifle in advance of the ambrotype; if there should happen to be the slightest quantity of fogging, that is, reduction on the transparent parts, it will be necessary either to take another negative or to clear off the fogginess. This is effected by flowing the plate with a dilute solution of iodine in iodide of potassium, until the picture turns slightly cream-colored; the plate is then washed and flowed with a solution of cyanide of potassium, which dissolves the newly formed iodide of silver and thus clarifies the picture. As soon as the latter is satisfactory, as to brightness, cleanness, and fine definition, wash and dry the plate, but apply no varnish.
As soon as the negative is in its place, and accurately focussed actinically, fix the prepared paper on the screen in its place. In order to preserve the paper perfectly flat and smooth, sponge the back with a wet sponge, and after it has thoroughly expanded, and lies uniformly, and without undulations, go round the edge to the amount of half an inch on the same surface which has been sponged with a thick solution of gum-arabic; attach the paper so prepared to an even plate of glass or drawing-board, of somewhat smaller dimensions than the paper, and allow it to dry. When dry, all the corrugations and undulations will have disappeared; the paper will be smooth and flat, and ready to receive the image, supposing naturally it has already been sensitized in the silver bath. If this operation has been neglected or omitted, the silver solution can be very expeditiously poured upon the surface and spread with a pad or tuft of cotton wool, until the film is uniform. The excess of silver is then removed, and the plate is reared on one corner over a wineglass to receive the drippings.
When dry it is placed in the focus of the negative, and the sun is turned on. By means of the two screws on the solar camera, the sun's light is maintained in its position during the whole operation. Printing on albumenized paper by the solar camera is a tedious operation, requiring sometimes several hours before it is complete, and sometimes even a clay or two by reason of the cloudiness of the sky. Where this sort of printing is practicable, as is the case generally in our own country, the results are the best. Printing by development, however, is more reliable, because it is altogether independent of the condition of the sky, whether cloudy or cloudless.
Several processes for printing by development will be found in the chapter in which this subject has been discussed. I will insert another in this place, from its applicability and reliability. It is the process of Blanquart-Evrard, whose prints have been so much admired.
Bromo-iodizing Bath for Paper.
| Water, | 12 ounces. |
| Gelatine, | 1 drachm. |
| Iodide of potassium, | 1 drachm. |
| Bromide of potassium, | 15 grains. |
Immerse the papers in this bath, as many at a time as it will contain, and keep them there for two or three hours. The bath can be used over and over again until exhausted. The papers are then taken out and hung up to dry. As soon as they are dry they may be preserved in a portfolio for use.
Previous to being sensitized they are exposed for a quarter of an hour to the vapor of hydrochloric acid. This operation is easily effected by fixing the paper along the sides and under the lid of a large nearly air-tight box, by means of varnished pins. At the bottom of the box place a saucer containing a handful of halt, an ounce or two of sulphuric acid, and Half as much boiling water. Vapors of hydrochloric acid will be generated in abundance, and will thus saturate the paper.
Sensitizing Bath.
| Nitrate of silver, | 1 ounce. |
| Distilled water., | 14 ounces. |
| Nitric acid to give it an acid reaction. | |
Let the paper float in this bath for ten minutes. By decomposition they will now contain the iodide, bromide, and chloride of silver. After sensitization they are allowed to drain, and then dried either by pressure between folds of bibulous paper or by suspension in the dark-room.
The exposure required will vary from a couple of seconds to half a minute beneath a negative, and longer than this on the screen of the solar camera. When the image is just visible, the printing has been carried on long enough.
The picture; is brought out by immersing it in the ordinary gallic acid bath, at a temperature of 80 degrees, and by keeping it there for a quarter of an hour or more as circumstances require. The bath must; be large enough for many pictures at a time; these are kept in motion all the while. They assume a disagreeable color, and become covered with spots which are removed by the operations afterward. As soon as the depth of shade is sufficiently intense, the: prints are taken out, laid one by one on a glass plate, and sponged on boll) sides and then immersed in a bath of hyposulphite of soda for five minutes, in which they are toned.
| Hyposulphite of soda, | 1 ounce. |
| Rain-water, | 20 ounces. |
After this they are removed direct into a second bath of hyposulphite of soda of the same strength, and are allowed to remain for twenty minutes, in which they are completely fixed.
The prints are then carefully washed in several waters and finally immersed in a bath of dilute hydrochloric; acid, which removes a yellow deposit and the spots above mentioned. A second washing completes the operation, with the exception of drying and exposing to the action of light for several weeks, which improves the reddish tone by changing it gradually into purple.
These prints will keep for an indefinite time, although toned with sulphur.
Diminished Photographs-It is a much easier operation to diminish the size of a photograph or object by photographic means than to amplify one; and the result in general is more satisfactory, because all the errors of the original are diminished in the same ratio as the whole picture is diminished. In order to take portraits so invisibly small as not, to be seen without the aid of a magnifier, we require a small camera specially arranged for the purpose. Such cameras furnished with the necessary objective, are manufactured by Bertsch in Paris. The tube requires no focussing; the only condition to be observed is to place the photograph, object, or print to be copied at or beyond a given distance. All lenses hive this property of requiring but one adjustment, which is permanent when once found, for objects beyond a given distance, which varies directly as the focal distance or power of the lens. Lenses for the diminutive pictures in question are in loons for all distances beyond three feet or so. Objectives, such as are sold for microscopic purposes, whose focal distances are one inch, half an inch, or a quarter of an inch, stay easily be arranged in a very small camera to take these diminutive portraits. But very little ingenuity will suffice to make such a camera out of a small telescope, where one tube slides into another. In the end of the inner tribe the objective is fixed; in the end of the outer, the ground glass and the plate-holder. This compound tube is fixed permanently upon a solid support six inches high, on a piece of board four or five feet in length or even more. On the opposite end of the board a plane is erected at right angles to the former and also to the axis of the camera. Find the point on this vertical board where the axis cuts the sauce, and mark it as the center of the picture to be copied. The picture is fixed upon this plane by means of tacks or pins in an inverted position and so that its center coincides as near as possible with the mark just made.
The next proceeding is to focus the lens. Take the long board and place it so as to receive the sun's rays upon the picture. Now move the inner tube of the camera in and out until the image is seen on the ground glass by means of a powerful magnifier. Focus with the greatest sharpness. This operation is very refined and requires a great deal of patience. When the utmost definition is thus obtained, place before the opening of the tube a piece of very thin violet-colored glass and see if the image is still sharp; if it be, fix the two tubes permanently so that their relative position can not be changed. In future this operation of focussing is no longer required. If, however, the picture is not sharp when the violet-colored glass is interposed, focus until you get perfect definition, and then fix as just directed.
The glass to receive the picture is thin and homogeneous; it is flowed also with a very thin collodion and sensitized as usual. All the operations are precisely the same as those already described in the preparation of the ambrotype. Of course a pair of spectacles of very high magnifying power is required while developing, fixing, and mounting. With a pair of pliers or forceps the small piece of glass can be broken down so as to fit into the ring, etc., which is to receive the picture.
The objectives manufactured by Grunow in New-York for microscopes have succeeded quite well with me in the production of almost invisible pictures; and I have no doubt be will be able to fit up a microscopic camera for such as require one from the indications here given. Such a camera, requiring great refinement of workmanship, will of course be snore likely to be better made by those who are accustomed to the refined adjustments of a microscope than by the photographer himself. The objectives of Grunow are not only unexceptionable, but are endowed with qualities superior to those in many of foreign origin.
Microscopic Objects.--The objectives just alluded to are very well suited for taking enlarged photographs of microscopic objects, such as the porous structure of wood, the siliceous deposit in guano, blood corpuscles, starch granules, itch insects, etc. Such an objective is fixed to an ordinary bellows camera, so arranged on a sliding platform that the axis of the objective coincides with the axis of the cone of concentrated light from the condenser of the solar microscope. The latter instrument has a special opening between the condenser and the objective to receive the transparent object whose photograph is to be taken of an enlarged size. If the objective is not quite achromatic, insert a piece of thin violet-colored glass over the object while focussing, and fix the objective so that the violet cone of light terminates in the optic center of the objective as before described. Focus by means of a pair of very powerful spectacles or a compound microscope. In the first place make the camera firm on the platform, when the objective is once in its place; then draw out the ground glass nearly as far as it will go, and afterward move the microscopic object nearer or farther off, as the case may be, by means of the thumb-screw, until the picture is visible on the ground glass; finally focus with accuracy so as to get perfect sharpness. The violet-colored glass may now be withdrawn. The prepared collodion plate is inserted in the place of the ground glass; the slide is drawn out, and the sun's light turned on for a fraction of a second. It is in many instances an advantage to keep the violet-colored glass in its place, because it moderates the light; and the result is even better with it than without it.
Finish the plate for a positive or negative according to rules already prescribed in ordinary photography.
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