Kodak Press, 1903. — 36 p.
There was a two-fold object in our offer of $4000.00 in prizes for the best Kodak pictures. First to demonstrate the rapid progress made by Kodakers in the photographic field, and second to get together a colie&ion of Kodak pictures which would prove a guide and an inspiration to all photographic
devotees.
This little book will show how well both missions have been fulfilled. The limitations of the half-tone process and the printing press prevent us, of course, from showing the pictures in all their original harmony of tone and color. Indeed, we have been obliged to omit a number of exquisitely soft and beautiful effects, yet, on the whole, we feel that the pictures selected are fairly representative, and will give an adequate idea of the variety and beauty of the photographs submitted in the contest. They are all from among the prize winners and from Kodak or Brownie film negatives.