n
(UK, dated, photography) A sensitized photographic paper for obtaining positives by artificial light. It is coated with gelatin containing silver bromide and chloride.
n
An etching or print made using this method.
n
A print produced by this method.
n
(cinematography) The process of loading two reels of film into a camera, so that they both pass through the camera gate together, formerly used for visual effects and as a subtractive colour process.
n
(photography) A print made on bromide paper.
n
(photography, historical) A sensitized paper coated with gelatin impregnated with silver bromide, used in contact printing and in enlarging.
n
(photography) An early photographic process that starts with a normally developed print exposed onto a silver-bromide paper that is then chemically bleached, hardened, and fixed.
adj
(publishing) Of artwork or hard copy: ready to be photographed, without requiring any additional editing.
n
(photography, historical) A print made from carbon tissue coated in pigmented gelatin, which is then selectively hardened by contact with a silver bromide paper print rather than exposure to light.
n
(photography) A photographic paper containing such silver salts; a print made on such paper.
n
(art) A technique of reproducing images in which a glass plate coated with collodion is etched with a burin and then photographed against a black background
n
(photography) A plate that covers the sensitized emulsion side of a photographic plate.
n
(photography) A dark room, where photographs are developed.
n
Alternative form of dark slide [(photography) A plate that covers the sensitized emulsion side of a photographic plate.]
n
(photography) A mechanism for imprinting the date and time onto film.
adj
(photography, of film) Processed and fixed; containing a visible negative (or positive for slide film) image
n
(photography) slide (used with a projector for projecting images)
n
(photography) A glass plate having a dry coating sensitive to light, upon which photographic negatives or pictures can be made, without moistening.
n
(photography) The coating of photosensitive silver halide grains in a thin gelatine layer on a photographic film.
n
A method of printing using a rubber or polymer rotating printing plate, most commonly used for packaging (labels, tape etc.).
n
(photography) An extension in the development time of an underexposed negative in order to bring out detail
adj
(photography, of a camera) Having an image sensor of the same size as 35mm film, i.e. 36 × 24 millimetres.
v
(transitive, photography) To give a soft effect to (a photograph) by covering the negative while printing with a ground-glass plate.
n
(photography) A printed strip of graduated tones used to check exposure and development times.
n
A camera that uses self-developing film to create a chemically developed print shortly after the photograph is taken.
n
A specialized type of negative film stock that is part of the intermediate process that goes from an original negative to a release element (most common in the motion picture film post-production process). The material used is itself the same as in an interpositive. The differences is that an IN has a negative image on it, while an IP has a positive image.
n
A specialized type of negative film stock that is part of the intermediate process that goes from an original negative to a release element (most common in the motion picture film post-production process). The material used is itself the same as in an internegative. The differences is that an IP has a positive image on it, while an IN has a negative image.
n
(photography, dated) A camera in which a number of plates can be exposed without reloading.
n
A European art style involving photomechanical transfers via silkscreen printing onto an emulsified surface.
n
(advertising) Manually created layout of artwork that is camera ready for photographic reproduction.
n
A form of intaglio etching in which a metal plate is roughened evenly and then smoothed to bring out an image.
n
A small photographic developing and printing system.
n
A composite picture made from overlapping photographs.
n
(photography, printing) An array of several negatives to be printed together by photolithography
n
(photography) An image in which dark areas represent light ones, and the converse.
n
(photography) A silver solution in which photographic negatives are placed to be sensitized.
n
The photosensitive emulsion of photographic film.
n
alternative form of photopaper [Photographic paper; paper coated with light-sensitive chemicals, used for making photographic prints.]
n
The blank surface on which a photomask can be created.
n
A photograph reproduced upon a ceramic surface.
v
To use photocomposition to prepare text for printing
n
(photography) photographic emulsion
n
A picture created by projecting an image onto a photosensitive surface such as a chemically treated plate or film, CCD receptor, etc.
n
(photography) A colloid, containing light-sensitive material, that is coated onto a length of film for use in predigital photography
n
(photography) paper or card coated with a light-sensitive emulsion, typically containing silver salts
n
An early form of photographic material in which the photosensitive emulsion was applied to a glass plate; latterly only used by astronomers.
n
Photographic paper; paper coated with light-sensitive chemicals, used for making photographic prints.
n
Positive (black on white) or negative (white on black) reproduction of printed matter or artwork made on a photostat machine, which uses photographic paper instead of a transparent negative, and uses a prism to render the paper negative readable instead of reversed.
n
(photography) A photographic slide.
n
A print from such a camera.
n
(photography) A positive image; one that displays true colors and shades, as opposed to a negative.
n
(photography) A shallow box, usually having a glass front, in which prints are made by exposure to light.
n
(historical) A very slow photographic plate, giving good contrasts between highlights and shadows, used especially for making lantern slides.
n
(photography) The image that a translucent object casts onto another object.
n
(photography) The edge of a roll of film, from which no image can be developed.
n
(photography) A liquid used in the process of developing a negative to reduce its darkness.
n
the reproduction, reprinting and copying of graphics, especially using electromechanical or photographic methods
n
(photography, historical) A German albumenized paper used in photography.
n
A color reference card used for skin-color balance in still-photography printing.
n
(photography) A solution of silver nitrate for sensitizing collodion plates for printing.
n
(photography) A transparent plate bearing an image to be projected to a screen.
n
(photography) Processing chemicals into which film is dipped, such as developer.
adj
Printed from stereotype plates.
n
(photography) A plate whose film retains its sensitivity only while wet. The film used in such plates is of collodion impregnated with bromides and iodides. Before exposure the plate is immersed in a solution of silver nitrate, and immediately after exposure it is developed and fixed.
n
A reproduction of a document created by means of the diazo chemical process.
v
To copy xerographically.
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