
RECREATION. XVII 


iy heya ws no Kodak but the Eastman Kodak. 
Kodak | Films 
Glass Plates 
—The Difference 
+B) 

« Films ” and “ plates” are identical except in the support upon which 
the sensitive material (emulsion) is coated. 
When this emulsion is coated on glass we have plates. 
Coated on a thin, flexible support it is called “ film.” 
Neither the glass nor this flexible transparent material does more than 
furnish a support for the emulsion which is to take the picture. When 
exposed in the camera, the results are tdentical, and when the pictures are 
made they are indistinguishable, except that in work where there is a 
tendency to what is technically known as halation, films are superior to 
plates owing to the thin support backed by black paper giving back no 
reflection. . 
Kodak fims are non-breakable, and are rolled on dees in connection 
with strips of black paper, which protect the film from the light, forming 
cartridges of a dozen exposures each that can be inserted in the Kodak in 
broad daylight. 
A film cartridge weighs about one-sixteenth as much as its equivalent in 
plates and plate holders. 
Films may be cut up and developed singly lixe plates or the entire strip 
may be developed at once—you can do it, or “ we do the rest.” 
All Kodaks use our film cartridges and can be 
Loaded in Daylight 
$5.00 to $35.00. 
EASTMAN KODAK CO. 
Catalogues free at the 
dealers or by mail. Rochester, N, Y. 

