... permanently attached. After mounting the tissue, as before described, and allowing the cement used time to dry, where it is of such a nature as to require it, I then submit the mounted tissue to the action of water, sufficiently heated to cause the... THE JOURNAL OF THE PHOTOGRAPHIC SOCIETY OF LONDON. - Page 84by HUGH W. DIAMOND, M.D., F.S.A. - 1866Full view - About this book
| Great Britain. Patent Office - 1861 - 766 pages
...surface next to the paper. The mounted tissue is submitted to the action of warm water, so as to remove those portions of the coloured gelatinous matter of...not been rendered insoluble by the action of light. The tissue is then removed from the water, dried, and transferred to the surface to be permanently... | |
| William Newton - 1864 - 424 pages
...submitted to the action of water, sufficiently heated to dissolve and remove those portions of the colored gelatinous matter of the tissue •which have not...insoluble by the action of light during exposure in the printing frame or camera. Where paper has been used as a part of the original tissue, this paper soon... | |
| 1880 - 658 pages
...diminished photograph, by means of the camera obscura. In either case the latent impression produced by the action of light during exposure in the printing-frame or camera is developed by a suitable developing agent — preferably a mixed solution of ferrous and potaisic... | |
| Albert Martin Marton - 1905 - 302 pages
...action of water, sufficiently heated to cause the solution and removal of those portions of the colored gelatinous matter of the tissue which have not been...has free access to the under stratum or back of the colored gelatinous coating, and the soluble portions of it are therefore readily removed by the action... | |
| |