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==Contents==
==Contents==
The target audience was the dedicated amateur for whom the magazine published such articles as "Water Front Scenes" by William S. Davies, Bruce Keith's "A Home Made Adjustable Daylight Enlarger", and "Photography in the Tropics", written by H. C. Cornthwaite in its September 1915 number.<ref>''Montpelier Evening Argus'', Tuesday 07 Sep 1915, p.3</ref>
At its launch the magazine was sold for 15c a copy or $1.50 annual subscription, advertised itself as "The New Illustrated Monthly of Progress in the Science and Art of Photography. An up-to-date publication for Amateurs and Professionals" with illustrations in colour, photogravure and heliotype.<ref>Advertisement, ''The Standard Union'', Tuesday 05 Dec 1899, p.8<?ref> The target audience though, was mainly the dedicated amateur for whom the magazine published such articles as "Water Front Scenes" by William S. Davies, Bruce Keith's "A Home Made Adjustable Daylight Enlarger", and "Photography in the Tropics", written by H. C. Cornthwaite in its September 1915 number.<ref>''Montpelier Evening Argus'', Tuesday 07 Sep 1915, p.3</ref>


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 00:58, 16 November 2020

Photo era : the American journal of photography was a magazine for amateur photographers published in Boston, Mass. from 1898-1920.[1]

Contents

At its launch the magazine was sold for 15c a copy or $1.50 annual subscription, advertised itself as "The New Illustrated Monthly of Progress in the Science and Art of Photography. An up-to-date publication for Amateurs and Professionals" with illustrations in colour, photogravure and heliotype.Cite error: A <ref> tag is missing the closing </ref> (see the help page).

References

  1. ^ "Photo era: the American journal of photography". Photo era : the American journal of photography. 1898. OCLC 648252089.