Pi IIC CAMERA. 



339 



TWO OK MOKE PHOTOGRAPHS ON ONE 

 PLATE. 



BY WILBUR e. SMITH, SOUTH NORWALK, 

 CONNECTICUT. 



Making" "doubles," or two or more 

 exposures on the same plate, is inter- 

 esting, and gives play and scope to all 

 the ingenuity that a person can com- 

 mand. Such "doubles" have one great 

 advantage, since we can repeatedly 

 photograph the same object on one 



plate, as I have done with my dog, 

 for I have him in four characteristic 

 positions, and so well has the duplica- 

 tor done its work that one can easily 

 believe the picture to be that of four 

 dogs. 



The process by which this is accom- 

 plished is shown in the picture, 

 where tbe figure in the upper corner 

 fades out to nothing", and the light 

 overlaps from the next exposure, leav- 

 ing no dividing line. The dog on the 



"MY DOG AND I." 

 Four photographs of one dog on one plate. Observe the excellent merging of the 

 four exposures into one photograph. 



