Airplane Photography. Herbert Eugene Ives
tion>
Herbert Eugene Ives
Airplane Photography
Published by Good Press, 2019
EAN 4057664605955
Table of Contents
CHAPTER II THE AIRPLANE CONSIDERED AS A CAMERA PLATFORM
CHAPTER III THE CAMERA—GENERAL CONSIDERATIONS
CHAPTER IV LENSES FOR AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHY
CHAPTER VI PLATE-HOLDERS AND MAGAZINES
CHAPTER VII HAND-HELD CAMERAS FOR AERIAL WORK
CHAPTER VIII NON-AUTOMATIC AERIAL PLATE CAMERAS
CHAPTER IX SEMI-AUTOMATIC AERIAL PLATE CAMERAS
CHAPTER X AUTOMATIC AERIAL PLATE CAMERAS
CHAPTER XI AERIAL FILM CAMERAS
CHAPTER XII MOTIVE POWER FOR AERIAL CAMERAS
CHAPTER XIII CAMERA AUXILIARIES
III THE SUSPENSION AND INSTALLATION OF AIRPLANE CAMERAS
CHAPTER XIV THEORY AND EXPERIMENTAL STUDY OF METHODS OF CAMERA SUSPENSION
CHAPTER XV PRACTICAL CAMERA MOUNTINGS
CHAPTER XVI THE INSTALLATION OF CAMERAS AND MOUNTINGS IN PLANES
IV SENSITIZED MATERIALS AND CHEMICALS
CHAPTER XVII THE DISTRIBUTION OF LIGHT, SHADE AND COLOR IN THE AERIAL VIEW
CHAPTER XVIII CHARACTERISTICS OF PHOTOGRAPHIC EMULSIONS
CHAPTER XX EXPOSURE OF AERIAL NEGATIVES
CHAPTER XXII PHOTOGRAPHIC CHEMICALS
V METHODS OF HANDLING PLATES, FILMS AND PAPERS
CHAPTER XXIII THE DEVELOPING AND DRYING OF PLATES AND FILMS
CHAPTER XXIV PRINTING AND ENLARGING
VI PRACTICAL PROBLEMS AND DATA
CHAPTER XXVII OBLIQUE AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHY
CHAPTER XXVIII STEREOSCOPIC AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHY
CHAPTER XXIX THE INTERPRETATION OF AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHS
CHAPTER XXX NAVAL AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHY
VII THE FUTURE OF AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHY
CHAPTER XXXI FUTURE DEVELOPMENTS IN APPARATUS AND METHODS
CHAPTER XXXII PICTORIAL AND TECHNICAL USES
CHAPTER XXXIII EXPLORATION AND MAPPING
I
INTRODUCTORY
AIRPLANE PHOTOGRAPHY
CHAPTER I
GENERAL SURVEY
Aerial Photography from Balloons and Kites.—Photography from the air had been developed and used to a limited extent before the Great War, but with very few exceptions the work was done from kites, from balloons, and from dirigibles. Aerial photographs of European cities had figured to a small extent in the illustration of guidebooks, and some aerial photographic maps of cities had been made, notably by the Italian dirigible balloon service. Kites had been employed with success to carry cameras for photographing such objects as active volcanoes, whose phenomena could be observed