Across
- Abbreviation for "through-the-lens".
- A single-legged camera support that functions in a manner similar to a tripod
- Digital single lens reflex camera
- Describes an extreme wide-angle lens that has an angle of view exceeding 100 - sometimes more than 180 - and that renders a scene as highly distorted
- A lens with a narrow angle of view, a longer-than-normal focal length
- when the film receives too little light
- Tinted glass, gelatin or plastic discs, squares or rectangles that modify the light passing through them
- In composition, to place two objects close together or side by side for comparison or contrast. Often helpful in showing scale in an image
- permits you to take an exposure meter reading from part of a scene and to keep the reading to apply it to the entire composition
- Denotes a photograph in which movement, either camera movement, zoom lens movement or movement within the scene
- The range of distance in a scene that appears to be in focus and will be reproduced as being acceptably sharp in an image
- A lens aperture setting calibrated to an f-number
- A circle-shaped opening in a lens (a hole, really) through which light passes to strike the film
- An acronym for Joint Photographic Experts Group
- A line recorded resulting from movement of a point of light
- The visible boundaries of a camera’s viewfinder
- The visible light spectrum is scientifically described in terms of color temperature, and is measured in degrees ______
- The clear and sharply-defined condition of an image
- The now defunct film speed rating system of the USA Standards Institute
- An image in which a subject’s irises are red instead of black
- A movable cover for an opening. In photography, that opening is the lens - are composed of blades, a curtain, a plate or another movable cover
- Photograph of a person's head and shoulders
- Ability of a lens and camera to focus automatically on an object within its focusing sensors
- A folding sleeve-like device usually made of fabric that fits between the lens and the camera
- An image in which the brightness values are reversed
- A transparent cellulose nitrate or cellulose actetate composition made in thin, flexible strips or sheets and coated with a light-sensitive emulsion for taking photographs
- The brightest area of a subject or scene
- Lens flaw - the inability of a lens to reproduce an accurate, focused, sharp image
- A photographic print in which the scale of an object is larger than the same object in the negative
- Distance from the camera that is far enough away that any object at or beyond it will be reproduced sharply
- The degree to which a substance is or may be opaque
- Refers to taking a series of pictures, at least three, of the same subject with varying exposures
- the range of difference between highlights and shadow areas in an image
- the ability to focus from infinity to extremely close
- A lens with an angle of view that is wider than that of a normal lens
- A pole on a base of three legs to which a camera can be attached
- The shape and size of a thing - used in photography principally in reference to small, medium and large
- The part of a scene that appears to be furthest from the viewer
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Down
- Compositional harmony of a scene based on the placement of elements of different sizes, shapes and colors
- The degree of hue in color as perceived subjectively - can be termed strong, vivid, intense or deep.
- enables a filter of one size to be attached to a lens of another size
- A sensor
- is the total amount of light striking the film or other photographic sensor
- A lens aperture setting calibrated to an f-number
- The arrangement of the elements (subject and other objects) in a scene or photograph
- Illumination that comes from a man-made source, such as electronic flash
- A lighting accessory that is used to soften illumination by bouncing or diffusing the light. It may keep your head dry to
- An instrument used to measure the amount of light reflected
- A camera ____ collects and focuses rays of light to form an image on film or sensor
- Light directed at the subject from behind the subject
- Film speed is designated by a single, almost universally-accepted common system developed by the International Organization for Standardization
- Removal of parts of an image in order to improve the image’s composition
- Sharpness of an image (as seen by the clarity of detail) formed by an optical system
- an intermittently-flashing, extremely-short duration, bright light source.
- Graphics Interchange Format
- Causes the camera to stop automatically focusing
- Also known as the Kodak neutral test card
- An image’s degree of clarity in terms of focus and contrast
- Decrease in the intensity of light as it spreads out from the source
- Transfer files from a storage device to a computer
- The reflection of a light in the subject’s eyes in a portrait
- Technique of depicting volumes and spacial relationships (a scene in three-dimensions) on a flat surface
- A single lens that is a component of a compound lens
- occurs when a photograph receives too much light
- Abbreviation for “Autofocus”
- An atmospheric condition characterized by fine particles of dust, smoke or moisture in the air that causes a loss of contrast in an image
- A form of image compression when saving the image that discards data from it
- Light that doesn’t belong in an image, often taking the shape of the aperture
- Occurs when light is partially or completely absorbed by a surface, converting its energy to heat.
- Generally, a picture of a subject that fills the frame
- Abbreviation for Single Lens Reflex
- ultraviolet radiation
- A digital image format that contains the most information possible
- This is the grainy look you find in a digital image caused by image artifacts
- The principal object (person, animal, thing) in a photograph
- the brightness of a light source.
- Every DCC members is a ___________
- When properly carried out, the object is rendered relatively sharply while its surroundings are blurred.
- A camera that is not a DSLR/SLR
- generally emphasizing lines, colors and geometrical forms
- Area of an image or a scene that displays average tonal values
- The gradual changing of one tint or shade to another by very small degrees.
- LCD
- The action of varying the focal length of a zoom lens to enlarge or reduce the image
- A shutter speed dial setting that indicates that the shutter will remain open as long as the release button is depressed
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