Summary of your 'study carrel' ============================== This is a summary of your Distant Reader 'study carrel'. The Distant Reader harvested & cached your content into a collection/corpus. It then applied sets of natural language processing and text mining against the collection. The results of this process was reduced to a database file -- a 'study carrel'. The study carrel can then be queried, thus bringing light specific characteristics for your collection. These characteristics can help you summarize the collection as well as enumerate things you might want to investigate more closely. This report is a terse narrative report, and when processing is complete you will be linked to a more complete narrative report. Eric Lease Morgan Number of items in the collection; 'How big is my corpus?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 15 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 37163 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 72 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 9 illustration 5 plate 5 New 4 silver 4 picture 4 paper 4 light 4 York 4 Daguerreotype 3 solution 3 print 3 Street 3 Mr. 2 water 2 photograph 2 negative 2 image 2 glass 2 fig 2 exposure 2 Talbot 2 St. 2 Kodak 2 Journal 2 Film 2 Fig 2 Dr. 2 Co. 2 Broadway 1 work 1 sidenote 1 second 1 ray 1 printing 1 portrait 1 place 1 photographic 1 nitrate 1 movement 1 hind 1 fore 1 foot 1 film 1 development 1 collodion 1 chloride 1 camera 1 bath 1 art 1 acid Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1636 plate 1496 paper 1364 picture 1271 water 1193 solution 1164 light 1027 camera 972 time 965 print 948 silver 818 film 814 part 802 process 745 glass 703 acid 662 exposure 633 illustration 583 lens 574 work 520 surface 503 use 502 inch 499 case 492 photograph 490 image 467 size 467 ounce 442 subject 434 hand 429 chloride 424 photographer 409 bath 402 side 400 effect 389 negative 382 photography 377 result 374 place 370 art 366 point 363 method 361 object 352 grain 350 way 344 action 341 collodion 333 line 326 year 320 foot 317 printing Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 4737 _ 775 Mr. 445 Kodak 300 New 252 J. 242 York 239 Fig 234 M. 216 Daguerreotype 205 Street 199 London 198 W. 194 N. 193 H. 190 C. 177 Photographic 158 S. 158 . 154 B. 148 R. 143 Photography 133 Journal 129 | 128 Film 125 St. 125 Dr. 124 Society 123 Premo 121 c. 121 A. 120 E. 119 FIG 113 Y. 112 ammonia 107 Broadway 105 Co. 104 L. 104 F. 103 American 102 Brownie 101 Camera 97 D. 95 England 91 Sir 90 Daguerre 84 P. 84 Messrs. 83 Talbot 81 John 80 Lens Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 6002 it 1908 i 1260 we 1161 he 1034 they 665 them 423 you 278 him 268 me 149 us 128 itself 90 themselves 89 himself 76 one 69 myself 47 she 30 ourselves 17 her 12 yours 8 yourself 7 herself 5 ours 5 mine 1 ya 1 unapproached 1 thy 1 thee 1 t 1 printing._--this 1 precautions:--they 1 paper.--dissolve 1 p 1 his Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 22809 be 3814 have 1603 make 1133 use 1127 do 1089 take 938 give 726 see 617 place 580 find 572 produce 561 obtain 438 require 420 show 415 add 407 follow 401 know 392 print 382 say 374 become 372 form 357 keep 356 contain 331 develop 329 remove 320 leave 317 appear 314 prepare 293 expose 289 pass 286 dissolve 279 allow 274 bring 273 wash 270 come 267 fix 266 get 262 employ 256 work 256 move 255 dry 248 hold 244 cover 241 put 241 apply 235 go 235 describe 231 pour 218 call 209 carry Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2381 not 1224 very 1044 more 983 other 947 then 900 so 836 good 830 well 799 first 716 most 704 only 701 same 628 as 594 great 580 up 553 much 546 many 537 also 533 out 525 negative 507 now 506 such 503 little 499 small 484 large 410 photographic 366 long 363 necessary 347 few 334 about 325 dark 322 white 322 however 315 even 296 high 295 too 290 less 277 black 276 possible 264 dry 261 again 260 ordinary 257 thus 252 off 241 down 238 different 232 simple 229 fine 229 far 225 second Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 370 good 121 most 92 least 72 great 69 high 39 large 37 fine 35 simple 32 early 31 slight 23 late 21 low 18 Most 16 old 15 strong 14 near 13 small 12 deep 11 full 11 easy 10 dark 8 short 8 bright 7 slow 6 wide 5 thin 5 safe 5 manif 5 long 4 quick 4 pleasant 4 dense 4 close 4 cheap 4 bad 3 wild 3 weak 3 thick 3 rough 3 new 3 minute 3 heavy 3 faint 3 broad 3 big 2 white 2 sharp 2 rich 2 mere 2 lovely Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 595 most 34 least 27 well 2 highest 1 strangest 1 easiest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 www.gutenberg.org 2 www.archive.org 2 archive.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/45714/45714-h/45714-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/45714/45714-h.zip 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/38866/38866-h/38866-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/38866/38866-h.zip 1 http://www.archive.org/details/evolutionofphoto00werguoft 1 http://www.archive.org 1 http://archive.org/details/practicalcinemat00talbrich 1 http://archive.org Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- 1 gwalker@netcom.com Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 16 plate is then 7 plate is ready 6 light is not 6 plate is now 6 print is then 5 print is now 4 camera is not 4 paper is first 4 paper is ready 4 parts are highly 4 water is then 3 acid be present 3 exposure is about 3 film is not 3 image does not 3 image is then 3 paper is not 3 paper is now 3 plate is not 3 print is not 3 prints are not 3 prints do not 3 silver developing solution 3 silver is not 3 time is not 3 water is not 2 _ do n''t 2 _ have _ 2 _ is about 2 _ is also 2 _ is not 2 _ known _ 2 _ see _ 2 _ were _ 2 acid is often 2 acid is very 2 camera is capable 2 camera is now 2 camera is simple 2 camera is then 2 camera is very 2 film is certain 2 film is then 2 illustration shows camera 2 image is very 2 inches is quite 2 lens is carefully 2 lens is very 2 lens was open 2 light is brightest Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 time is no object 2 camera is not suitable 1 _ are not _ 1 _ is not sufficient 1 _ is not too 1 acid are not sufficient 1 acid is not entirely 1 camera is not more 1 camera were not large 1 exposure was not intermittent 1 film is not absolutely 1 film is not perfectly 1 glass was not so 1 glasses are not so 1 image does not gradually 1 lens be not achromatic 1 light do not practically 1 light has no effect 1 light has no farther 1 light is not always 1 light is not wholly 1 light was not necessary 1 paper is not thereby 1 papers are not good 1 papers are not readily 1 part are not only 1 photograph forms no part 1 photograph is no more 1 photographs are not likely 1 picture has no sky 1 picture is no criterion 1 pictures are not so 1 pictures were not equal 1 plate is not necessary 1 plate is not so 1 plate was not properly 1 plates are not quite 1 print is not quite 1 print is not so 1 prints are not likely 1 prints are not much 1 prints are not suitable 1 process is not difficult 1 process was not entirely 1 silver is not sufficiently 1 solution be not sufficiently 1 solution gives no precipitate 1 solution have no longer 1 surface is not necessary 1 time is not far A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 36446 author = Blaney, Henry R. title = Photogravure date = keywords = Co.; Edition; New; PHOTOGRAPHY; Photo; Street; York; illustration; plate summary = (copper-plate) process of the New York Photogravure Company. CHAPTER VIII.--Printing from the Plate.--Steel Facing, 39 the dry plate in the slide film inside and exposing through the glass, printing frame the plate is laid in the air (protected from light) for a the copper plate, which is printed from the transparency, must have a copper plate, the tissue coming inside half way. Keystone thin crystal glass transparency plates over the negative in negative tissue on the copper plate shows all the detail clearly in the solution makes it easier to strip the paper from the copper plate, after The Scovill & Adams Co. supply copper-plates of the finest quality, DEVELOPMENT OF NEGATIVE RESIST ON THE COPPER PLATE, AND PREPARATION FOR copper plate into the water, removing all air bubbles, keeping the New York Steel and Copper Plate Co., 171 Wallabout Street, Brooklyn, new Chrome-gelatine process, printed on paper 11 × 14 inches, with id = 33034 author = Canadian Kodak Company title = Premo Cameras, 1914 date = keywords = Film; Kodak; Pack; Premo; illustration summary = make the Premo Film cameras remarkably light and compact. because the Premo Film Pack, with which most of our cameras are loaded, With these advantages of easy loading and operating, the Premo Film Pack amateurs, is certain with the Premo Film Pack Tank. make it a simple matter to load any Premo plate camera with film packs. The Premo Film Pack Adapter has the general size and appearance of a plate these Premos are as compact as purely film cameras. simplicity of loading and operating possible only in a Premo Film Pack this camera offer the assurance that the Film Premos will produce as good The shutter of the Film Premo No. 1 is the Kodak Ball Bearing with bulb development, for if they will use the Premo Film Pack Tank, they can plates (can be used in a 4 × 5 Premo Film Pack Tank) 1.75 id = 33183 author = Canadian Kodak Company title = Kodaks and Kodak Supplies, 1914 date = keywords = Brownie; Film; Kodak; Pocket; illustration summary = R. and meniscus lenses used on Kodak and Brownie Cameras For average photography, the camera fitted with Kodak Ball Bearing Grain Leather Case for Vest Pocket Kodak _Special_ 1.50 pictures and loads with the Kodak Film cartridge of six exposures (No. 120). No. 1A F.P.K., R.R. Type, R.R. lens, Kodak Ball Bearing shutter $15.00 Both cameras offer the usual Kodak simplicity, and the exceptional lens The 3A Folding Pocket Kodak was the first camera made for 3-1/4 × 5-1/2 R. lens, Kodak Ball Bearing shutter $20.00 R. lens, Kodak Ball Bearing shutter $20.00 To produce such cameras we have taken the regular Folding Pocket Kodak In enlarging with the Brownie or Vest Pocket Kodak Enlarging Camera, the Brownie Kodak Film Tank, for use with No. 1, No. 2 and No. 2 this little attachment, fitted to a Kodak or Brownie Camera, will enable Lens, the Camera, Composition, Exposure, Developing and Printing are all id = 35709 author = Davis, Frederick C. title = Making Your Camera Pay date = keywords = American; Ave; Chicago; Magazine; New; Popular; St.; World; York; photograph; print summary = marketing photographs you have only to discover the needs of editors of photographs already sold to publications and printed in them, which Again, no magazine wishes to buy a photograph of something not new. Prints of the 2-1/4 × 3-1/4 size are too small to offer to magazines a news-magazine which uses timely photographs of wide interest. _Vogue_, 19 West 44th St., New York, uses exclusive photographs of Religious publications are not given to printing many photographs, magazines, which use a great amount of photographs and illustrated When a print is to be offered to a local newspaper, the photographer If a photograph is offered for the exclusive use of one magazine it may there is such a wide market for photographically artistic prints of When a publication prints a photograph on its pages, it copyrights it Magazine-Rights Only." But the same photograph may be acceptable too to id = 63517 author = Humphrey, S. D. (Samuel Dwight) title = A Practical Manual of the Collodion Process, Giving in Detail a Method For Producing Positive and Negative Pictures on Glass and Paper. date = keywords = Fig; Humphrey; Journal; Patent; acid; collodion; glass; illustration; nitrate; paper; sidenote; silver; solution; water summary = sulphuric acid, at the same time adding a little water; a mixture of 5 The white precipitate formed on mixing albumen with nitrate of silver is precipitate of chloride of silver, insoluble in nitric acid, but soluble hydriodic acid is easily prepared by adding iodine to water containing in water, the solution being acid to test-paper. "common salt," and mix it with a solution containing nitrate of silver; have but one nitrate of silver solution for both positive and negative one should use other preparations of collodion and silvering solution, In using this collodion, pour it upon a clean glass plate to form a film consists in the use of collodion, and a solution of a salt of silver, and means of collodion and a solution of a salt of silver and a camera, =Lewis''s Patent Glass Baths= for Nitrate of Silver Solutions.--Since the id = 37743 author = Muybridge, Eadweard title = The Attitudes of Animals in Motion, Illustrated with the Zoopraxiscope date = keywords = foot; fore; hind summary = ground will be the left fore foot, followed in order by the right hind, striking of the left hind foot, the body is supported on the right The two hind feet and the right fore foot immediately relative positions of the feet of a rapid walking horse, with a stride of that at the instant his right fore foot strikes the ground, the left hind stride of about 10 feet, the left hind foot has just struck the ground The right hind foot now strikes the ground, and one half of the stride is 4. The right hind and left fore feet--_diagonals_. 4. The right hind and left fore feet--_diagonals_. 4. The right hind and left fore feet--_diagonals_. The left fore foot now strikes the ground, 96 inches in advance of the movement, the horse left the ground with a fore foot and landed on a hind id = 42547 author = Robinson, H. P. (Henry Peach) title = The Art and Practice of Silver Printing date = keywords = CHAPTER; Fig; chloride; illustration; light; negative; paper; place; print; printing; silver; solution; water summary = chloride is employed for producing silver prints, and the probability is In printing on albumenized paper we must divide the operations, and give albumenized paper (face downwards) on a solution of 10 grains of silver off the surface, and a negative printed on such a paper would have all APPLYING THE SILVERING SOLUTION TO THE ALBUMENIZED PAPER. free nitrate, as then the paper would produce flat prints. and prints the same as ordinary paper, and any tone may be produced. "In cutting the paper for an 11 by 14 print, the length of the sheet exercise some care in placing these pieces on the negative for printing. of silver nitrate solution on the back of the sensitive paper is and place over the printed part a piece of black paper roughly torn to that the sky will print on to the white paper in its proper place; id = 168 author = Snelling, Henry Hunt title = The History and Practice of the Art of Photography date = keywords = Daguerreotype; Mr.; Talbot; fig; illustration; light; paper; photographic; picture; plate; ray; silver summary = painting produced a kind of copy upon the prepared paper, those parts piece of paper covered with a very sensitive photographic preparation. The spectrum impressed upon paper prepared with a weak solution of the change color even in the dark, photographic images taken on paper Photographic art, either on paper, or metalic plates--but, like all the paper or plate is exposed to the full influence of the light, after directly on the plate, and in examining the color reflected light full of water, coat the plate over dry iodine to a dark gold color, piece of prepared paper, and expose it to the light. Preparation of the paper for the Camera.--The second process consists preparation of Amphitype paper, the parts upon which the light has copied of a red color, on paper spread with the chloride of silver.** placed in a camera obscura a paper prepared with the bromide of silver id = 45714 author = Talbot, Frederick Arthur Ambrose title = Practical Cinematography and Its Applications date = keywords = Bull; Co.; Dr.; Institute; MOVING; Marey; Monsieur; Motograph; Mr.; Williamson; camera; film; illustration; movement; picture; second; work summary = 1. Mechanism of Camera showing Threading of Film 28 with a cinematograph camera and a few thousand feet of film, can pictures is so great that a good film of 300 feet will fetch £40 For complete success in moving-picture work it is essential to have an sixteen pictures per second, the movements recorded are far from being [Illustration: THE JURY MOVING-PICTURE CAMERA. In some cameras the intermittent movement of the film is effected by a For moving-picture work a special type of tripod head has been evolved, Having examined the mechanism of the moving-picture camera, and the Most cameras are provided with a film indicator enabling the operator [Illustration: THE "AEROSCOPE" MOVING-PICTURE HAND CAMERA. moving-pictures can be taken are those pertaining to the filming of efficient moving-picture machine, small, light, and compact, working film-moving mechanism and shutter running the whole time the button is The first records upon the film a complete picture id = 40468 author = Various title = The Barnet Book of Photography: A Collection of Practical Articles date = keywords = Carbon; Lens; P.O.P.; Water; bath; development; exposure; fig; illustration; image; light; negative; paper; plate; print; solution summary = The quantity of developer necessary for a plate of a given size The developed plate, after being well rinsed with water, is placed high-lights, the plate should be removed from the solution as soon in exposure and development and printing, to preserve relative tones with its vehicle be stripped from a good print on paper this image warm coloured prints are desired, an enlarged negative should be Developed prints may be toned in the combined bath 9, 10 or 11, or to the ordinary dark-room light as when developing plates. paper, and now take the first print to be developed in both hands, Development takes place in shorter time than with cold-bath papers, negative, it would be well to develop the first print in order to exposure to light, remove from frame and develop on plate prepared printed in the usual way, and developed on a prepared glass plate; id = 63427 author = Various title = The Daguerreian Journal, Vol. I, No. 8, March 1, 1851 date = keywords = Broadway; Daguerreotype; Journal; New; Street; York summary = nitric acid, it was hoped that the pure silver parts of the plate, being a mere drop of nitrate is added to the solution, if a plate of a glass is wash the silver precipitate several times in sulphuric acid and water, and and water; and a _solution of pure nitrate of silver_ will be obtained. a weak solution of muriate of ammonia, in water, this will produce a white Containing also--The Process for Galvanizing Plates, and the whole Art DAGUERREOTYPE Apparatus, Plates, Cases, Frames, Gold Lockets, Polishing Pictures put up in all styles of the Art. Plates, Cases, Lockets, Frames, street, New York, manufacturer of Daguerreotype cases, mats, preservers, Daguerreotype Likenesses taken in every style of the Art. 2ly to the Daguerreian Art; embracing plates of their own, and French connected with the art, constantly on hand, and for sale at New York DEALERS in all kinds of Daguerreotype Stock, Plates, Chemicals, and id = 63428 author = Various title = The Daguerreian Journal, Vol. II, No. 2, June 1, 1851 date = keywords = Broadway; Daguerreotype; New; plate; silver summary = An iodized silver plate was placed in the dark with a little fine string coiled over parts of it, and a polished silver plate supported 1-8th of an B. An iodized _silvered_ plate was exposed to light until brown, and a E. A silver plate was iodized and placed in the dark with an engraving, F. A silver plate was iodized and placed upon an engraving laid on a Sensitive iodide of silver being placed upon a plate of glass, a mercurial silver had become a deep brown, almost a black, and the mercurial plate surface of silver or copper, and in a short time we find around the iodine silver plate, form separate colored circles, until these come in contact The action of light on the different colors of the iodide of silver is quite removed the silver surface from off the plate, and that being the id = 38866 author = Werge, John, active 1854-1890 title = The Evolution of Photography With a Chronological Record of Discoveries, Inventions, Etc., Contributions to Photographic Literature, and Personal Reminescences Extending over Forty Years date = keywords = America; Archer; Daguerreotype; Dr.; Dublin; England; Exhibition; Falls; Hudson; Hughes; John; London; Messrs.; Mr.; New; Niagara; Niépce; Photographic; Reade; Sir; Society; South; St.; Street; Talbot; Washington; Wedgwood; York; art; picture summary = ultimately produced the photographic picture on a piece of paper photographic portraiture, plain and coloured, by the collodion process, photographs on silver plates, and negatives on paper, and examples of Society on a new printing process with collodio-chloride of silver on South London Photographic Society, on his method of rendering silver News_, and, in a review of the Society''s exhibition, published Nov. 22nd, 1867, I expressed an honest opinion on Mr. Robinson''s picture At a meeting of the South London Photographic Society, held in the large photographic pictures on paper, and there they remained until light or -First photographic portrait taken on a Daguerreotype plate by Many very beautiful and interesting photographic views of Niagara Falls, producing photographic portraits, the collodion process--or the place more natural, truthful, and photographically useful backgrounds art-photography to a few of the pictures which exhibit, in a marked Amongst the cabinet pictures exhibited by English photographers, I think id = 39691 author = Woodbury, Walter E. title = Photographic Amusements, Ninth Edition Including A Description of a Number of Novel Effects Obtainable with the Camera date = keywords = FIG; exposure; glass; illustration; image; light; photograph; picture; plate; portrait summary = photographic practice and is able to make a good negative or print. describing and illustrating novel and interesting photographic effects of different views of the same object this method of photographing The action of the light on the plate takes place through this slit. the following novel method of making so-called spirit photographs: figure, place it upon a thick, large plate-glass, supported by props Filter, and coat clean glass plates with this solution, and dry with a _Plates and Exposure._--If colored flowers are being photographed, A curious experiment showing that a photographic dry-plate can be from the photographic plate, and has since made negatives of coins image of the object will move on the ground-glass screen of the camera. reception of the ground-glass plate upon which the image is to be photograph objects in the distance and obtain images very much larger two pictures are printed on one piece of paper, the combined image may