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r some druggist, may have dropped, either accidentally or experimentally, a root, if not of the ginger, yet of some kindred plant. The magnificent _Fuchsia_ was first noticed in the possession of a seaman's wife by Fuchs in 1501, a century prior to the introduction of the ginger plant into England. T. J. BUCKTON. Birmingham. * * * * * PHOTOGRAPHIC CORRESPONDENCE. _Stereoscopic Angles_.--The discussion in "N. & Q." relative to the best angle for stereoscopic pictures has gone far towards a satisfactory conclusion: there are, however, still a few points which may be beneficially considered. In the first place, the kind of stereoscope to be used must tend to modify the mental impression; and secondly, the _amount_ of reduction from the size of the original has a considerable influence on the final result. If in viewing a stereoscopic pair of photographs, they are placed _at the same distance_ from the eyes as the _length of the focus of the lens used in producing them_, then without doubt the distance between the eyes, viz. about two and a quarter {228} inches, is the best difference between the two points of view to produce a perfectly natural result; and if the points of operation be more distant from one another, as I have before intimated, an effect is produced similar to what would be the case if the pictures were taken from a _model_ of the object instead of the object itself. When it is intended that the pictures taken are to be viewed by an instrument that requires their distance from the eyes to be _less_ than the focal length of the lens used in their formation, what is the result? Why, that they subtend an angle larger than in nature, and are consequently apparently _increased_ in bulk; and the obvious remedy is to _increase_ the angle between the points of generation in the exact ratio as that by which the visual distance is to be lessened. There is one other consideration to which I would advert, viz. that as we judge of _distance_, &c. mainly by the degree of _convergence_ of the optic axes of our two eyes, it cannot be so good to arrange the camera with its two positions quite parallel, especially for objects at a short or medium distance, as to let its centre radiate from the principal object to be delineated; and to accomplish this desideratum in the readiest way (for portraits especially), the ingenious contrivance of Mr. Latimer Clark, described in the _Jo
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