AMATEUR PHOTOGRAPHY. 



405 



AMATEUR PHOTOGRAPHY. 



" For sport the lens is better than the gun. " 



I wish to make this department of the utmost 

 use to amateurs. I shall, therefore, be glad to 

 answer any questions and to print any items sent 

 me by practical amateurs relating to their experi- 

 ence in photography. 



No. i is entitled 

 Made with a 



camera. 



On a 



lens. 



7th ANNUAL COMPETITION. 



Recreation has conducted 6 amateur 

 photographic competitions, all of which 

 have been eminently successful. The 7th 

 opened April 1st, 1902, and will close No- 

 vember 30th, 1902. 



Following is a list of prizes to be 

 awarded : 



First prize; A Long Focus Korona Camera 

 5x7, made by the Gundlach Optical Co., Roch- 

 ester, N. Y., fitted with a Turner-Reich Anastig- 

 niat Lens, and listed at $85. 



Second prize: A No. 3 Folding Pocket Kodak, 

 made by the Eastman Kodak Co.. Rochester, N. 

 Y., fitted with a Bausch & Lomb Lens Plastig- 

 mat Unicum Shutter, and listed at $61.50. 



Third prize : An Al-Vista-Panoramic Camera, 

 made by the Multiscope and Film Co., Burlington, 

 Wis., and listed at $40. 



Fourth prize: A Wizard C Camera, 4x5, 

 made by the Manhattan Optical Co. Cresskill, 

 N. J., with B. & L. Iris Diaphragm and Leather 

 Carrying Case; listed at $33. 



Fifth prize: A Waterproof Wall Tent, 12 x 16, 

 made by D. T. Abercrombie & Co., New York, 

 and Listed at $32. 



Sixth prize: A Gold Hunting Case Watch; 

 ilsted at $50. 



Seventh prize: A Tourist Hawkeye Camera, 

 4x5, and made by the Blair Camera Co., Roch- 

 ester, N. Y., and listed at $15. 



Eighth prize: A Bristol Steel Fishing Rod, 

 made by the Horton Mfg. Co., Bristol, Conn., and 

 listed at $6. 



The 10 next best pictures will each be awarded 

 one dozen 8x10 Carbutt Plates, made by the Car- 

 butt Dry Plate Co., Wavne Junction, Philadelphia, 

 Pa. 



The 10 next best pictures will each be awarded 

 one dozen 5x7 Carbutt Plates. 



The 10 next best pictures will each be awarded 

 one dozen 4x5 Carbutt Plates. 



A special prize: A Goerz Binocular Field Glass, 

 listed at $74.25, will be given for the best picture 

 of a live wild animal. 



Subjects are Hmited to wild animals, 

 birds, fishes, camp scenes, and to figures or 

 groups of persons, or animals, repre- 

 senting in a truthful manner shooting, fish- 

 ing, amateur photography, bicycling, sail- 

 ing or other form of outdoor or indoor 

 sport or recreation. Awards to be made 

 by 3 judges, none of whom shall be com- 

 petitors. 



Conditions: Contestants must submit 2 

 mounted prints, either silver, bromide, 

 platinum or carbon, of each subject, which, 

 as well as the negative, shall become the 

 property of Recreation. Negatives not to 

 be sent unless called for. 



In submitting pictures, please write sim- 

 ply your full nam© and address on the back 

 of each, and number such prints as you 

 may send, 1, 2, 3, etc. Then in a letter ad- 

 dressed Photographic Editor, Recreation, 

 say, for instance: 



plate. 



paper. 



Printed on 



Length of exposure, 



Then add any further information you 

 may deem of interest to the judges, or to 

 other amateur photographers. Same as to 

 Nos. 2, 3, etc. 



This is necessary in order to save post- 

 age. In all cases where more than the 

 name and address of the sender and serial 

 number of picture are written on the back 

 of prints I am required to pay letter post- 

 age here. I have paid as high as $2.50 on 

 a single package of a dozen pictures, in 

 addition to that prepaid by the sender, on 

 account of too much writing on the prints. 



Any number of subjects may be sub- 

 mitted. 



Pictures that may have been published 

 elsewhere, or that may have been entered 

 in any other competition, not available. No 

 entry fee charged. 



Don't let people who pose for you look 

 at the camera. Occupy them in some other 

 way. Many otherwise fine pictures have 

 failed to win in the former competitions 

 because the makers did not heed this warn- 

 ing. 



HOW THE WOODCOCK PHOTO WAS 

 TAKEN. 



I see in August Recreation Mr. J. E. 

 Tylor, of Oxford, Md., objects to my criti- 

 cism of his photo, "Besieged." I did not 

 say there was a string running from the 

 coon's collar. I said there appeared to be 

 one. I believe that other Recreation read- 

 ers interested in this last contest will agree 

 with me that something looking much like 

 a collar is around the coon's neck. Never- 

 theless, if the photo is genuine I congratu- 

 late Mr. Tylor on his ability to catch such 

 an interesting scene. 



Referring to his letter in Recreation 

 regarding the water being "sufficiently 

 choppy to meet my ideas," I beg to differ 

 from him. The wind was not to blame, 

 nor the camera, but the person who made 

 the exposure. Had he broken the glare on 

 the water a few moments before the photo 

 was taken he would have had detail in the 

 expanse of water between the man in the 

 boat and the shore beyond. There is de- 

 tail around the dog in the water. 



Referring to Mr. F. A, Greenhawk's ar- 

 ticle in the same issue with Mr. Tylor's, 

 I notice he makes the remark that if the 

 coon had been held by a rope the line 

 would have been slack instead of straight, 

 as in the photo. Not necessarily. Possibly 

 someone on the bank was holding the rope, 

 or cord. 



Criticising my woodcock photo, Mr. 

 Greenhawk says, "Did y«u ever appr©ach 



