In regulating the height of the head it is tedious and clumsy to arrange the proper blocks on the seat by trial. The simpler plan is to make the sitter first take his place on a separate seat with its back to the wall, having previously marked on the... The Yorkshire Archaeological Journal - Page 5461898Full view - About this book
| Woolhope Naturalists' Field Club, Woolhope Naturalists' Field Club, Hereford, England - 1898 - 534 pages
...sitters may be made to occupy so nearly the same position that the camera need hardly be refocussed. In regulating the height of the head it is tedious...camera can be adjusted with much precision by fixing a looking-glass in the wall (say five feet from his chair), so that he can see the reflection of his... | |
| British Association for the Advancement of Science - 1894 - 1272 pages
...utilised in any way. If the incidence of the light be not the same in all cases, they cannot be nsed to make composite portraits. By attending to the following...camera can be adjusted with much precision by fixing a lookingglass in the wall (say five feet from his chair), so that he can see the reflection of his... | |
| Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire - 1896 - 414 pages
...the distance between the top of the head and the bottom of the chin shall in no case be less than 1| inch. Smaller portraits can hardly be utilised in...camera can be adjusted with much precision by fixing a looking-glass in the wall (say five feet from his chair), so that he can see the reflection of his... | |
| Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire - 1896 - 420 pages
...sitters may be made to occupy so nearly the same position that the camera need hardly he refocussed. In regulating the height of the head it is tedious...camera can be adjusted with much precision by fixing a looking-glass in the wall (say five feet from his chair), so that he can see the reflection of his... | |
| 1898 - 758 pages
...the distance between the top of the head and the bottom of the chin shall in no case be less than 1¿ inch. Smaller portraits can hardly be utilised in...camera can be adjusted with much precision by fixing a looking-glass in the wall (say five feet from his chair), so that he can see the reflection of his... | |
| 1898 - 534 pages
...sitters may be made to occupy so nearly the same position that the camera need hardly be refocussed. In regulating the height of the head it is tedious...camera can be adjusted with much precision by fixing a looking-glass in the wall (say five feet from his chair), so that he can see the reflection of his... | |
| Alfred Cort Haddon - 1898 - 468 pages
...sitters may be made to occupy so nearly the same position that the camera need hardly be refocussed. In regulating the height of the head it is tedious...should be used in each case. The appropriate number of the sitter is noted, and the proper blocks are placed on the chair with the assurance that what... | |
| British Association for the Advancement of Science - 1908 - 1002 pages
...sitter first take his place on a separate seat with his back to a wall, on which are previously marked, at heights corresponding to those of the various heights...each case. The appropriate number for the sitter is found and noted, and then the proper blocks are placed on the chair by the observer or an assistant,... | |
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