multiple exposure
Appearance
See also: multiple-exposure
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Noun
[edit]multiple exposure (plural multiple exposures)
- (photography) A photograph produced by exposing film or some other photosensitive surface to focused light more than one time, usually by opening and closing a camera shutter repeatedly, thereby generating a picture consisting of superimposed images.
- 1972 July 11, "Eclipse in New York (photo caption)," Victoria Advocate (Texas, USA), p. 1 (retrieved 11 Aug. 2011):
- ECLIPSE IN NEW YORK — this multiple exposure shows stages of the solar eclipse, starting at top left, as seen in New York City Monday afternoon.
- 2008 February 18, Dave Johnson, “How to Make Multiple Exposures”, in PC World, retrieved 11 Aug. 2011:
- [W]ith a film camera . . . to take a good multiple exposure . . . your camera needed to have a special control that prevented the film from advancing while you captured each frame in the series. . . . These days, creating a multiple exposure digitally is a snap.
- 1972 July 11, "Eclipse in New York (photo caption)," Victoria Advocate (Texas, USA), p. 1 (retrieved 11 Aug. 2011):
- (photography) The process of producing such a photograph.
- 1948 September 26, Jacob Deschin, “Two Kinds of Work: Mental ‘Views’ Contrasted With Pictures of Fact”, in New York Times, page X13:
- Mr. Telberg-von-Teleheim's method is that of multiple exposure, either in the camera when taking the picture, or in the enlarger when making the print.
Translations
[edit]photograph
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process
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See also
[edit]References
[edit]- “multiple exposure”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.