Anthony's photographic bulletin for .. . ll throw shadows. Never photograph red hair without powdering it. Use portrait lenses for portrait work. The developer that some operators will swear by, others willswear at. Subordinate the accessories to the figure. Let the story be first. ^n. The Bristol (Eng.) International Photographic Exhibition will beheld at the galleries of The Academy of Arts, from December 14, 1896,to January 23, 1897. Medals will be awarded for landscapes, marines,architecture, portraiture, genre work, enlargements, transparencies,scientific photography, heliochrome, and oth


Anthony's photographic bulletin for .. . ll throw shadows. Never photograph red hair without powdering it. Use portrait lenses for portrait work. The developer that some operators will swear by, others willswear at. Subordinate the accessories to the figure. Let the story be first. ^n. The Bristol (Eng.) International Photographic Exhibition will beheld at the galleries of The Academy of Arts, from December 14, 1896,to January 23, 1897. Medals will be awarded for landscapes, marines,architecture, portraiture, genre work, enlargements, transparencies,scientific photography, heliochrome, and other process work, and forapparatus. No picture having previously gained an award will be ad-mitted, except in the champion class. All communications must beaddressed to Mr. M. Lavington, 20 Berkeley Square, Clifton, Bristol,England ; and all exhibits must be sent, carriage prepaid, to arrive notlater than December 1, 1896. We have half a dozen entry blanks, and will be pleased to send themto any of our readers who contemplate By Stephen H. Horgan. THE PROFITABLE STUDY OF FORMULAS. IT was intended to publish in this department, this month, someformulas to show how they could be profitably studied if arrangedin comparative tables. By a strange coincidence our exceedinglyvaluable London contemporary, Process Work and the Printer, has aleading article on this very subject, which presents the matter so muchmore clearly than we could have done that it is given here. The com-parative tables of enamel and lithographic ink formulas are examples ofthe tables we had prepared, the others being omitted for want of space. It is commonly said of trade handbooks that they are of little value, and it isinvariably suggested that the author is either keeping back something, or does notknow sufficient about his subject. For our own part we consider that no book is sothoroughly bad but that it contains something to justify its existence, and make itworth buying. We would recommend young


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, booksubjectphotogr, bookyear1870