-
21 фотографическое репродуцирование
Engineering: photographic reproductionУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > фотографическое репродуцирование
-
22 фоторепродуцирование
1) Engineering: copying2) Advertising: photographic reproductionУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > фоторепродуцирование
-
23 фоторепродукция
ж. photographic reproduction, photoreproduction -
24 фотографическое качество
Русско-английский большой базовый словарь > фотографическое качество
-
25 Sutton, Thomas
SUBJECT AREA: Photography, film and optics[br]b. 1819 Englandd. 1875 Jersey, Channel Islands[br]English photographer and writer on photography.[br]In 1841, while studying at Cambridge, Sutton became interested in photography and tried out the current processes, daguerreotype, calotype and cyanotype among them. He subsequently settled in Jersey, where he continued his photographic studies. In 1855 he opened a photographic printing works in Jersey, in partnership with L.-D. Blanquart- Evrard, exploiting the latter's process for producing developed positive prints. He started and edited one of the first photographic periodicals, Photographic Notes, in 1856; until its cessation in 1867, his journal presented a fresher view of the world of photography than that given by its London-based rivals. He also drew up the first dictionary of photography in 1858.In 1859 Sutton designed and patented a wideangle lens in which the space between two meniscus lenses, forming parts of a sphere and sealed in a metal rim, was filled with water; the lens so formed could cover an angle of up to 120 degrees at an aperture of f12. Sutton's design was inspired by observing the images produced by the water-filled sphere of a "snowstorm" souvenir brought home from Paris! Sutton commissioned the London camera-maker Frederick Cox to make the Panoramic camera, demonstrating the first model in January 1860; it took panoramic pictures on curved glass plates 152×381 mm in size. Cox later advertised other models in a total of four sizes. In January 1861 Sutton handed over manufacture to Andrew Ross's son Thomas Ross, who produced much-improved lenses and also cameras in three sizes. Sutton then developed the first single-lens reflex camera design, patenting it on 20 August 1961: a pivoted mirror, placed at 45 degrees inside the camera, reflected the image from the lens onto a ground glass-screen set in the top of the camera for framing and focusing. When ready, the mirror was swung up out of the way to allow light to reach the plate at the back of the camera. The design was manufactured for a few years by Thomas Ross and J.H. Dallmeyer.In 1861 James Clerk Maxwell asked Sutton to prepare a series of photographs for use in his lecture "On the theory of three primary colours", to be presented at the Royal Institution in London on 17 May 1861. Maxwell required three photographs to be taken through red, green and blue filters, which were to be printed as lantern slides and projected in superimposition through three projectors. If his theory was correct, a colour reproduction of the original subject would be produced. Sutton used liquid filters: ammoniacal copper sulphate for blue, copper chloride for the green and iron sulphocyanide for the red. A fourth exposure was made through lemon-yellow glass, but was not used in the final demonstration. A tartan ribbon in a bow was used as the subject; the wet-collodion process in current use required six seconds for the blue exposure, about twice what would have been needed without the filter. After twelve minutes no trace of image was produced through the green filter, which had to be diluted to a pale green: a twelve-minute exposure then produced a serviceable negative. Eight minutes was enough to record an image through the red filter, although since the process was sensitive only to blue light, nothing at all should have been recorded. In 1961, R.M.Evans of the Kodak Research Laboratory showed that the red liquid transmitted ultraviolet radiation, and by an extraordinary coincidence many natural red dye-stuffs reflect ultraviolet. Thus the red separation was made on the basis of non-visible radiation rather than red, but the net result was correct and the projected images did give an identifiable reproduction of the original. Sutton's photographs enabled Maxwell to establish the validity of his theory and to provide the basis upon which all subsequent methods of colour photography have been founded.JW / BC -
26 copia
f.1 copy.sacar una copia to make a copyhacer una copia de seguridad de algo to make a backup of something2 copying.3 (spitting) image (person).4 carbon copy, cc.pres.indicat.3rd person singular (él/ella/ello) present indicative of spanish verb: copiar.imperat.2nd person singular (tú) Imperative of Spanish verb: copiar.* * *1 (gen) copy2 (de fotografía) print4 literal (abundancia) abundance\sacar una copia to make a copycopia legalizada certified true copypapel de copia copy paper* * *noun f.1) copy2) imitation* * *SF1) (=reproducción) [de fotografía, documento] copy; (Econ) duplicatecopia carbónica — Cono Sur carbon copy
copia de calco — Cono Sur carbon copy
copia de respaldo, copia de seguridad — (Inform) back-up copy
hacer una copia de seguridad — to back up, make a back-up copy
copia en color — colour o (EEUU) color copy
copia fotostática — photostat, photocopy
copia impresa — (Inform) hard copy
2) (=imitación) [de obra de arte, edificio] copy3) liter (=abundancia) abundance, plenty* * *1) (de documento, fotografía) copyhice or saqué dos copias — I made two copies
2) ( imitación) copy, imitation* * *= copy [copies, -pl.], copying, dump, duplicate, offloading [off-loading], reproduction, single copy [multiple copies, -pl.], transcript, duplicating, download, duplication.Ex. Usually a central cataloguing agency is based upon a national library or copyright office, where publishers are required by law to send at least one copy of every book published in that country.Ex. The copying of words and phrases from the schedules encourages the indexer to use them as they stand.Ex. On The Source this can be sent from disk in one ' dump', which CompuServe accepts messages only in response to line-by-line prompts.Ex. Because duplicates can be easily made, sheaf catalogues were popular in applications where multiple copies were desirable.Ex. It enables easy access to on-line data bases and CD-ROM, off-loading of records, editing, and office tasks such as spreadsheets and word processing.Ex. Acknowledgements: the author wishes to acknowledge her debt to the authors of the literature that has gone before, and also to the various persons and organisations that have kindly permitted the reproduction of their work.Ex. As stated earlier, the main purpose of electrostatic copiers is to produce single copies, but they will produce multiple copies very rapidly.Ex. The cataloguer must make an exact transcript of the title on the title page.Ex. This article discusses the lifespan of photographic film and warns about processing and duplicating methods = Este artículo trata de la vida útil de las películas fotográficas y advierte sobre los métodos de procesamiento y duplicado.Ex. The software enables the user to specify the entry point of the download.Ex. A catalogue code is a systematic arrangement of laws and statutes so as to avoid inconsistency and duplication in catalogues.----* catalogación por copia = copy cataloguing.* copia caché = caching.* copia de archivo = archival print.* copia de catalogación = derivative cataloguing.* copia de papel de calco = carbon copy.* copia de seguridad = backup [back-up], duplicate copy, backup copy.* copia de seguridad del sistema = system backup.* copia digitalizada = facsimile image.* copia electrónica = electrocopying [electro-copying].* copia en papel = hard copy [hardcopy].* copia exacta = replica.* copia impresa = printout [print-out], print copy, print-off.* copia literal = fair copy.* copia mecanografiada = typescript.* copia por ciclostil = cyclostyling.* copias = multiple copies [single copy, -sing.].* era de la copia electrónica, la = electrocopying era, the.* error de copia = clerical error, clerical mistake.* hacer copias = make + multiple copies.* hacer copias mediante multicopista por disolvente = spirit duplication.* hacer más copias de Algo = produce + additional copies.* hacer una copia = download.* hacer varias copias de Algo = reproduce in + multiple copies, produce + multiple copies.* libertad de copia = copyleft.* ser una copia exacta de = be a dead ringer for.* sistema de copias de seguridad = backup system.* * *1) (de documento, fotografía) copyhice or saqué dos copias — I made two copies
2) ( imitación) copy, imitation* * *= copy [copies, -pl.], copying, dump, duplicate, offloading [off-loading], reproduction, single copy [multiple copies, -pl.], transcript, duplicating, download, duplication.Ex: Usually a central cataloguing agency is based upon a national library or copyright office, where publishers are required by law to send at least one copy of every book published in that country.
Ex: The copying of words and phrases from the schedules encourages the indexer to use them as they stand.Ex: On The Source this can be sent from disk in one ' dump', which CompuServe accepts messages only in response to line-by-line prompts.Ex: Because duplicates can be easily made, sheaf catalogues were popular in applications where multiple copies were desirable.Ex: It enables easy access to on-line data bases and CD-ROM, off-loading of records, editing, and office tasks such as spreadsheets and word processing.Ex: Acknowledgements: the author wishes to acknowledge her debt to the authors of the literature that has gone before, and also to the various persons and organisations that have kindly permitted the reproduction of their work.Ex: As stated earlier, the main purpose of electrostatic copiers is to produce single copies, but they will produce multiple copies very rapidly.Ex: The cataloguer must make an exact transcript of the title on the title page.Ex: This article discusses the lifespan of photographic film and warns about processing and duplicating methods = Este artículo trata de la vida útil de las películas fotográficas y advierte sobre los métodos de procesamiento y duplicado.Ex: The software enables the user to specify the entry point of the download.Ex: A catalogue code is a systematic arrangement of laws and statutes so as to avoid inconsistency and duplication in catalogues.* catalogación por copia = copy cataloguing.* copia caché = caching.* copia de archivo = archival print.* copia de catalogación = derivative cataloguing.* copia de papel de calco = carbon copy.* copia de seguridad = backup [back-up], duplicate copy, backup copy.* copia de seguridad del sistema = system backup.* copia digitalizada = facsimile image.* copia electrónica = electrocopying [electro-copying].* copia en papel = hard copy [hardcopy].* copia exacta = replica.* copia impresa = printout [print-out], print copy, print-off.* copia literal = fair copy.* copia mecanografiada = typescript.* copia por ciclostil = cyclostyling.* copias = multiple copies [single copy, -sing.].* era de la copia electrónica, la = electrocopying era, the.* error de copia = clerical error, clerical mistake.* hacer copias = make + multiple copies.* hacer copias mediante multicopista por disolvente = spirit duplication.* hacer más copias de Algo = produce + additional copies.* hacer una copia = download.* hacer varias copias de Algo = reproduce in + multiple copies, produce + multiple copies.* libertad de copia = copyleft.* ser una copia exacta de = be a dead ringer for.* sistema de copias de seguridad = backup system.* * *A (de un documento, una fotografía) copyhice or saqué dos copias del informe I made two copies of the reportCompuestos:legally validated copycertified copy● copia de respaldo or de seguridadback-up copylegally validated copysoft copyB (imitación) copy, imitationes una copia del edificio que hay en París it's a copy o replica of the building in Paris* * *
Del verbo copiar: ( conjugate copiar)
copia es:
3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente indicativo2ª persona singular (tú) imperativo
Multiple Entries:
copia
copiar
copia sustantivo femenino
copy;
copiar ( conjugate copiar) verbo transitivo
to copy;
copió el artículo a máquina he typed out a copy of the article;
le copia todo al hermano he copies his brother in everything;
le copié la respuesta a Ana I copied the answer from Ana
verbo intransitivo
to copy
copia sustantivo femenino
1 (reproducción) copy
2 (parecido) imitation: es una mala copia de Elvis, he's a bad Elvis impersonator
3 Inform copia de seguridad, backup
copiar verbo transitivo
1 (una persona, máquina) to copy [de, from]
2 Educ (en un examen) to cheat
3 (imitar) to imitate
' copia' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
duplicar
- falsificar
- pirata
- sacar
- trasunto
- adjunto
- calco
- copiar
- exacto
- fiel
- imitación
- plagio
- réplica
English:
backup
- blueprint
- carbon copy
- certify
- copy
- fake
- hard copy
- imitation
- master copy
- minute
- original
- print
- printout
- replica
- score
- back
- carbon
- duplicate
- reprint
* * *copia nf1. [reproducción] copy;hacer una copia de algo to duplicate sth;sacar una copia to make a copycopia certificada certified copy; Informát copia impresa printout;copia en limpio fair copy2. [de disco, libro, software] copy;han vendido 20.000 copias de su último disco they've sold 20,000 copies of their latest recordcopia de evaluación [libro] Br inspection o US examination copy; [software] evaluation copy;copia maestra master copy;Informát copia de seguridad backup (copy);hacer una copia de seguridad de algo to back sth up, to make a backup of sth3. [imitación] copy;es una copia de un cuadro de Monet it's a copy of a painting by Monet4. [acción] copying5. [persona] (spitting) image6. [de fotografía] copy;quería dobles copias de este carrete, por favor I'd like an extra set of prints of this film, pleaseFot copia de contacto contact print* * *f copy* * *copia nf1) : copy2) : imitation, replica* * * -
27 Waterhouse, Major-General James
SUBJECT AREA: Photography, film and optics[br]b. 1841d. 28 September 1922[br]English military man and photographer.[br]Waterhouse spent most of his career in the Indian Army. In 1861–2 he was commissioned to photograph the tribes of central India, and over the next few years visited many parts of the subcontinent. In November 1866, after working for five months in the Great Trigonometrical Survey learning the process of photozincography (an early photomechanical process used chiefly for map making), he took charge of photographic operations at the Surveyor-General's office in Calcutta, a post he held until retiring in 1897. During this time he developed many improvements in the photomechanical methods used for reproduction in his office. He also experimented with methods of colour-sensitizing photographic materials, experimenting with eosine dye and publishing in 1875 the fact that this made silver halide salts sensitive to yellow light. He also discovered that gelatine dry plates could be made sensitive to red and infra-red illumination by treatment with alizarine blue solution.He continued his researches upon his retirement and return to England in 1897, and made a special study of the early history of the photographic process. His work on dye sensitizing brought him the Progress Medal of the Royal Photographic Society, and the Vienna Photographic Society awarded him the Voigtländer Medal for researches in scientific photography. One invention often erroneously attributed to him is the Waterhouse stop, the use of a series of perforated plates as a means of adjusting the aperture of a photographic lens. This was described in 1858 by a John Waterhouse, being his only contribution to photography.BCBiographical history of technology > Waterhouse, Major-General James
-
28 Acres, Birt
SUBJECT AREA: Photography, film and optics[br]b. 23 July 1854 Virginia, USAd. 1918[br]American photographer, inventor and pioneer cinematographer.[br]Born of English parents and educated in Paris, Acres travelled to England in the 1880s. He worked for the photographic manufacturing firm Elliott \& Co. in Barnet, near London, and became the Manager. He became well known through his frequent lectures, demonstrations and articles in the photographic press. The appearance of the Edison kinetoscope in 1893 seems to have aroused his interest in the recording and reproduction of movement.At the beginning of 1895 he took his idea for a camera to Robert Paul, an instrument maker, and they collaborated on the building of a working camera, which Acres used to record the Oxford and Cambridge Boat Race on 30 March 1895. He filmed the Derby at Epsom on 29 May and the opening of the Kiel Canal in June, as well as ten other subjects for the kinetoscope, which were sold by Paul. Acres's association with Paul ended in July 1895. Acres had patented the camera design, the Kinetic Lantern, on 27 May 1895 and then went on to design a projector with which he gave the first successful presentation of projected motion pictures to take place in Britain, at the Royal Photographic Society's meeting on 14 January 1896. At the end of the month Acres formed his own business, the Northern Photographic Company, to supply film stock, process and print exposed film, and to make finished film productions.His first shows to the public, using the renamed Kineopticon projector, started in Piccadilly Circus on 21 March 1896. He later toured the country with his show. He was honoured with a Royal Command Performance at Marlborough House on 21 July 1896 before members of the royal family. Although he made a number of films for his own use, they and his equipment were used only for his own demonstrations. His last contribution to cinematography was the design and patenting in 1898 of the first low-cost system for amateur use, the Birtac, which was first shown on 25 January 1899 and marketed in May of that year. It used half-width film, 17.5 mm wide, and the apparatus served as camera, printer and projector.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFellow of the Royal Photographic Society 1895.Bibliography27 May 1895 (the Kinetic Lantern).9 June 1898 (the Birtac).Further ReadingJ.Barnes, 1976, The Beginnings of the Cinema in England, London. B.Coe, 1980, The History of Movie Photography, London.BC -
29 Herschel, John Frederick William
SUBJECT AREA: Photography, film and optics[br]b. 7 March 1792 Slough, Englandd. 11 May 1871 Collingwood, England[br]English scientist who introduced "hypo" (thiosulphate) as a photographic fixative and discovered the blueprint process.[br]The only son of Sir William Herschel, the famous astronomer, John graduated from Cambridge in 1813 and went on to become a distinguished astronomer, mathematician and chemist. He left England in November 1833 to set up an observatory near Cape Town, South Africa, where he embarked on a study of the heavens in the southern hemisphere. He returned to England in the spring of 1838, and between 1850 and 1855 Herschel served as Master of the Royal Mint. He made several notable contributions to photography, perhaps the most important being his discovery in 1819 that hyposulphites (thiosulphates) would dissolve silver salts. He brought this property to the attention of W.H.F. Talbot, who in 1839 was using a common salt solution as a fixing agent for his early photographs. After trials, Talbot adopted "hypo", which was a far more effective fixative. It was soon adopted by other photographers and eventually became the standard photographic fixative, as it still is in the 1990s. After hearing of the first photographic process in January 1839, Herschel devised his own process within a week. In September 1839 he made the first photograph on glass. He is credited with introducing the words "positive", "negative" and "snapshot" to photography, and in 1842 he invented the cyanotype or "blueprint" process. This process was later to be widely adopted by engineers and architects for the reproduction of plans and technical drawings, a practice abandoned only in the late twentieth century.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKnight of the Royal Hanoverian Guelphic Order 1831. Baronet 1838. FRS 1813. Copley Medal 1821.Further ReadingDictionary of National Biography, 1968, Vol. IX, pp. 714–19.H.J.P.Arnold, 1977, William Henry Fox Talbot, London; Larry J.Schaaf, 1992, Out of the Shadows: Herschel, Talbot and the Invention of Photography, Newhaven and London (for details of his contributions to photography and his relationship with Talbot).JWBiographical history of technology > Herschel, John Frederick William
-
30 print
[prɪnt]1. noun1) a mark made by pressure:أَثَرa fingerprint.
2) printed lettering:الأحْرُف المَطْبوعَه، طِباعَهI can't read the print in this book.
3) a photograph made from a negative:صورَة فوتوغْرافِيَّهI entered three prints for the photographic competition.
4) a printed reproduction of a painting or drawing.نُسْخَة لَوْحَة أو صورَه2. verbيَطْبَعThe invitations will be printed on white paper.
2) to publish (a book, article etc) in printed form:يَنْشُر كِتاباHis new novel will be printed next month.
3) to produce (a photographic image) on paper:يَطْبَع صورَة فوتوغرافِيَّهHe develops and prints his own photographs.
يَطْبَع على القِماشWhen the cloth has been woven, it is dyed and printed.
5) to write, using capital letters:يَكْتُب إسْمَه بِحُروف كَبيرَهPlease print your name and address.
-
31 Ives, Frederic Eugene
SUBJECT AREA: Photography, film and optics[br]b. 17 February 1856 Litchfield, Connecticut, USAd. 27 May 1937 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA[br]American printer who pioneered the development of photomechanical and colour photographic processes.[br]Ives trained as a printer in Ithaca, New York, and became official photographer at Cornell University at the age of 18. His research into photomechanical processes led in 1886 to methods of making halftone reproduction of photographs using crossline screens. In 1881 he was the first to make a three-colour print from relief halftone blocks. He made significant contributions to the early development of colour photography, and from 1888 he published and marketed a number of systems for the production of additive colour photographs. He designed a beam-splitting camera in which a single lens exposed three negatives through red, green and blue filters. Black and white transparencies from these negatives were viewed in a device fitted with internal reflectors and filters, which combined the three colour separations into one full-colour image. This device was marketed in 1895 under the name Kromskop; sets of Kromograms were available commercially, and special cameras, or adaptors for conventional cameras, were available for photographers who wished to take their own colour pictures. A Lantern Kromskop was available for the projection of Kromskop pictures. Ives's system enjoyed a few years of commercial success before simpler methods of making colour photographs rendered it obsolete. Ives continued research into colour photography; his later achievements included the design, in 1915, of the Hicro process, in which a simple camera produced sets of separation negatives that could be printed as dyed transparencies in complementary colours and assembled in register on paper to produce colour prints. Later, in 1932, he introduced Polychrome, a simpler, two-colour process in which a bipack of two thin negative plates or films could be exposed in conventional cameras. Ives's interest extended into other fields, notably stereoscopy. He developed a successful parallax stereogram process in 1903, in which a three-dimensional image could be seen directly, without the use of viewing devices. In his lifetime he received many honours, and was a recipient of the Royal Photographic Society's Progress Medal in 1903 for his work in colour photography.[br]Further ReadingB.Coe, 1978, Colour Photography: The First Hundred Years, London J.S.Friedman, 1944, History of Colour Photography, Boston. G.Koshofer, 1981, Farbfotografie, Vol. I, Munich.E.J.Wall, 1925, The History of Three-Colour Photography, Boston.BC -
32 Lippman, Gabriel
SUBJECT AREA: Photography, film and optics[br]b. 16 August 1845 Hallerick, Luxembourgd. 14 July 1921 at sea, in the North Atlantic[br]French physicist who developed interference colour photography.[br]Born of French parents, Lippman's work began with a distinguished career in classics, philosophy, mathematics and physics at the Ecole Normale in Luxembourg. After further studies in physics at Heidelberg University, he returned to France and the Sorbonne, where he was in 1886 appointed Director of Physics. He was a leading pioneer in France of research into electricity, optics, heat and other branches of physics.In 1886 he conceived the idea of recording the existence of standing waves in light when it is reflected back on itself, by photographing the colours so produced. This required the production of a photographic emulsion that was effectively grainless: the individual silver halide crystals had to be smaller than the shortest wavelength of light to be recorded. Lippman succeeded in this and in 1891 demonstrated his process. A glass plate was coated with a grainless emulsion and held in a special plate-holder, glass towards the lens. The back of the holder was filled with mercury, which provided a perfect reflector when in contact with the emulsion. The standing waves produced during the exposure formed laminae in the emulsion, with the number of laminae being determined by the wavelength of the incoming light at each point on the image. When the processed plate was viewed under the correct lighting conditions, a theoretically exact reproduction of the colours of the original subject could be seen. However, the Lippman process remained a beautiful scientific demonstration only, since the ultra-fine-grain emulsion was very slow, requiring exposure times of over 10,000 times that of conventional negative material. Any method of increasing the speed of the emulsion also increased the grain size and destroyed the conditions required for the process to work.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsRoyal Photographic Society Progress Medal 1897. Nobel Prize (for his work in interference colour photography) 1908.Further ReadingJ.S.Friedman, 1944, History of Colour Photography, Boston.Brian Coe, 1978, Colour Photography: The First Hundred Years, London. Gert Koshofer, 1981, Farbfotografie, Vol. I, Munich.BC -
33 cliché
m.1 cliché, commonplace, old saw, banality.2 stencil, cliché, plate.3 cliché, negative of photographic film.* * *1 (imprenta) plate2 (fotografía) negative3 figurado (lugar común) cliché* * *SM1) (Tip) stencil2) (=tópico) cliché3) (Fot) negative* * *1) (expresión, idea) cliché2) ( de multicopista) stencil; (Impr) plate; (Fot) negative* * *= cliche, stereotyped, stencil, master, spirit master, hackneyed expression.Ex. The true meaning of the cliche 'A picture is worth more than ten thousand words,' is never more evident than when students first see themselves on camera after simulating reference interviews in the classroom.Ex. His work is criticized for its triviality, quantity, linguistically impoverished style, anemia of characterization, and cliched, stereotyped ideas and plots.Ex. The stylus emits tiny sparks which cut minute holes in the surface of the stencil.Ex. The supply would need to be replenished when the multiple copies had been used, so a master would be kept - usually for offset litho reproduction or for cutting a stencil on an electronic scanner.Ex. The catalogue covers filmstrips, slides, films, filmloops, portfolios, posters, charts, overhead projection transparencies, kits, cassettes, gramophone records, work cards, educational games, spirit masters, etc.Ex. By stereotypes I mean the hackneyed expressions people use in a more or less automatic fashion without stopping to think what they really mean.----* clichés = stereotyping.* hacer un cliché = cut + stencil.* lleno de clichés = cliche-ridden.* novela escrita a base de fórmulas o clichés = formula fiction.* * *1) (expresión, idea) cliché2) ( de multicopista) stencil; (Impr) plate; (Fot) negative* * *= cliche, stereotyped, stencil, master, spirit master, hackneyed expression.Ex: The true meaning of the cliche 'A picture is worth more than ten thousand words,' is never more evident than when students first see themselves on camera after simulating reference interviews in the classroom.
Ex: His work is criticized for its triviality, quantity, linguistically impoverished style, anemia of characterization, and cliched, stereotyped ideas and plots.Ex: The stylus emits tiny sparks which cut minute holes in the surface of the stencil.Ex: The supply would need to be replenished when the multiple copies had been used, so a master would be kept - usually for offset litho reproduction or for cutting a stencil on an electronic scanner.Ex: The catalogue covers filmstrips, slides, films, filmloops, portfolios, posters, charts, overhead projection transparencies, kits, cassettes, gramophone records, work cards, educational games, spirit masters, etc.Ex: By stereotypes I mean the hackneyed expressions people use in a more or less automatic fashion without stopping to think what they really mean.* clichés = stereotyping.* hacer un cliché = cut + stencil.* lleno de clichés = cliche-ridden.* novela escrita a base de fórmulas o clichés = formula fiction.* * *A (expresión) clichéB1 (de multicopista) stencil2 ( Impr) plate3 ( Fot) negative* * *
cliché sustantivo masculino
(Impr) plate;
(Fot) negative
cliché sustantivo masculino
1 Fot negative
2 Impr plate
3 (tópico) cliché
' cliché' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
latiguillo
- tópica
- tópico
English:
cliché
- stencil
* * *cliché nm1. Fot negative2. Imprenta plate3. [tópico] cliché* * *m1 TIP plate2 ( tópico) cliché* * *cliché nm1) : cliché2) : stencil3) : negative (of a photograph) -
34 копирование
1) General subject: backup, copying, imitation, replication2) Engineering: calking, copying process, copying work, dubbing, duplicating, duplication, printing-down (на формную пластину), profiling, reverse engineering (образцов приборов), tracing3) Agriculture: gauging4) Professional term: burning5) Law: imitating, re-design, simulation6) Automobile industry: duplicate work (на станке)7) Cinema: printing, printing process8) Metallurgy: contour machining, template machining9) Polygraphy: burning (экспонирование), copy exposure, copying operation, die tracing, die tracing (рисунка штампа), manifolding, photographic printing, reprint, tracing (на кальке, на восковке), transcription10) Textile: reserve printing11) Information technology: backing up, mirroring12) Mechanic engineering: contour machining (при обработке изделий), profiling (при обработке изделий), template machining (при обработке изделий)13) Business: mock, reproduction14) Automation: contouring, duplication (на станке), following, form copying, model cutting (на станке)15) Makarov: copying (изготовление копий), tracing (на кальке, восковке)16) Security: duplexing17) SAP.tech. copy -
35 подразделение съёмки и изготовления фотоснимков
Military: photographic and reproduction unitУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > подразделение съёмки и изготовления фотоснимков
-
36 прямой способ фоторепродукции
Cartography: direct photographic method, direct photography, direct reproductionУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > прямой способ фоторепродукции
-
37 фотопромышленность
1) Engineering: photographic industry2) Polygraphy: image reproduction industryУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > фотопромышленность
-
38 kopieren
* * *das Kopierencopying* * *ko|pie|ren [ko'piːrən] ptp kopiert1. vtto copy; (= nachahmen) to imitate; (= ablichten) to photocopy; (= durchpausen) to trace; (PHOT ) Film to printeine Datei auf die Festplatte kopíéren — to copy a file onto the hard disk
oft kopiert, nie erreicht — often imitated but never equalled (Brit) or equaled (US)
2. vito copy; (= fotokopieren) to photocopy* * *1) (to make an imitation or reproduction of (something): Copy the way I speak; Copy this passage into your notebook.) copy2) (a type of photographic process used for copying documents.) Xerox3) (to photocopy (something) using this process.) Xerox* * *ko·pie·ren *[koˈpi:rən]vt▪ etw \kopieren to print sth3. (Doppel herstellen)▪ etw \kopieren to copy sth4. (nachbilden)▪ etw \kopieren to copy [or replicate] sth5. (nachahmen)▪ jdn/etw \kopieren to imitate [or copy] sb/sthoft kopiert, nie erreicht often imitated but never equalled [or AM a. duplicated]* * *transitives Verb1) copy; (imitieren) imitate2) (fotokopieren) photocopy3) (Fot., Film) print* * ** * *transitives Verb1) copy; (imitieren) imitate2) (fotokopieren) photocopy3) (Fot., Film) print* * *adj.copying adj. v.to copy v.to replicate v.to reproduce v. -
39 изображение
display, icon, image, ( на экране индикатора) paint, pattern, picture, representation, record кфт.* * *изображе́ние с.1. опт. imageизображе́ние ви́дно несовмещё́нным ( в дальномере) — the images are seen [appear] unmatched (in a range finder)восстана́вливать изображе́ние ( в голографии) — reconstruct the image (in holography)дава́ть перевё́рнутое изображе́ние — form an inverted imageдава́ть прямо́е изображе́ние — form an erect imageискажа́ть изображе́ние — distort the image(ме́тод) получе́ния изображе́ния — imageryнаблюда́ть изображе́ние — view the imageнакла́дывать одно́ изображе́ние на друго́е — superimpose two images [one image onto another]получа́ть изображе́ние чего-л. с по́мощью электро́нного луча́ — image smth. by [with] an electron beamпроеци́ровать изображе́ние на экра́не — project [throw] the image on the screenразвё́ртывать изображе́ние — scan the image [picture]изображе́ния слива́ются — (two) images fuse togetherслия́ние изображе́ний — the fusion of (two) images«сма́зать» изображе́ние ( в фотографии) — blur the picture [image]совмеща́ть (полови́нки или два) изображе́ния ( в дальномере) — match the imagesувели́чивать изображе́ние — blow up [enlarge, magnify] the imageуменьша́ть изображе́ние — reduce [scale down] the imageуменьша́ть изображе́ние (напр. в приборах электронного зондирования) — demagnify the imageчё́тко фокуси́ровать изображе́ние — bring the image into a sharp focus2. тлв. image, pictureизображе́ние сжа́то, напр. све́рху, сни́зу — the picture is cramped at, e. g., top, bottom3. рлк., осцил. representation, display, patternсмеща́ть [перемеща́ть] изображе́ние — shift the display [pattern]4. мат. representation; transformаксонометри́ческое изображе́ние — axonometric drawingви́димое изображе́ние — visible imageвнеосево́е изображе́ние — off-axis imageизображе́ние в рентге́новских луча́х — X-ray imageголографи́ческое изображе́ние — holographic imageграфи́ческое изображе́ние — graphic representationдвойно́е изображе́ние — double imageдействи́тельное изображе́ние — real imageдифракцио́нное изображе́ние — diffraction imageзерка́льное изображе́ние — mirror imageзерка́льное изображе́ние анте́нны — image antennaискажё́нное изображе́ние — distorted imageизображе́ние исто́чника — source imageизображе́ние исто́чника, зерка́льное — image sourceкартографи́ческое изображе́ние — cartographic(al) representationкванто́ванное изображе́ние по вре́мени — sampled pictureизображе́ние ко́да — code patternконгруэ́нтное изображе́ние — true-sided imageконтра́стное изображе́ние — contrast [hard] imageлапла́сово изображе́ние — Laplace transformнаходи́ть лапла́сово изображе́ние фу́нкции — apply the Laplace transform to a functionнаходи́ть оригина́л по лапла́сову изображе́нию — recover the original function from its Laplace transformоты́скивать лапла́сово изображе́ние фу́нкции — find the Laplace transform of a functionлате́нтное изображе́ние — latent imageмни́мое изображе́ние — virtual imageнегати́вное изображе́ние — negative imageнеконтра́стное изображе́ние — soft imageнеподви́жное изображе́ние1. тлв. static image2. рлк. stationary patternнечё́ткое изображе́ние — blind imageобра́тное изображе́ние — reversed [inverted] imageобъё́мное изображе́ние — stereoscopic picture, three-dimensional presentation, 3-d imageопти́ческое изображе́ние — optical imageоста́точное изображе́ние ( на ЭЛТ) — after-image, retained image, image retentionпараксиа́льное изображе́ние — paraxial imageперевё́рнутое изображе́ние — reversed [inverted] imageперспекти́вное изображе́ние — perspective, panorama [panoramic] sketchпобо́чное изображе́ние — false [ghost] imageпозити́вное изображе́ние — positive imageпо́лное изображе́ние — composite pictureполутенево́е изображе́ние — scale-of-gray [gray-scale] imageполуто́новое изображе́ние — half-tone image, half-tone pictureизображе́ние, полу́ченное шли́рен-ме́тодом — schlieren imageпростра́нственное изображе́ние — stereoscopic picture, three-dimensional presentation, 3-d imageпрямо́е изображе́ние1. опт. erect image2. полигр. direct copyрадиолокацио́нное изображе́ние — radar displayориенти́ровать радиолокацио́нное изображе́ние — orient [stabilize] the radar displayрадиолокацио́нное изображе́ние, ориенти́рованное относи́тельно и́стинного се́вера (меридиа́на) — north-(upwards-)stabilized [north-oriented, azimuth-stabilized] displayрадиолокацио́нное изображе́ние с ориента́цией по ку́рсу — heading-stabilized [vessel-oriented, relative] displayрадиолокацио́нное изображе́ние с ориента́цией по се́веру — north-(upwards-)stabilized [north-oriented, azimuth-stabilized] displayраздво́енное изображе́ние тлв. — split pictureразмы́тое изображе́ние — diffuse imageрасплы́вчатое изображе́ние — blurred imageра́стровое изображе́ние1. полигр. half-tone (photography), screening, half-tone reproduction2. свз. half-tone imageрасфокуси́рованное изображе́ние — out-of-focus [defocused] imageре́зкое изображе́ние — sharp [crisp] imageизображе́ние релье́фа — relief representationизображе́ние релье́фа, гипсометри́ческое — colour-relief presentation, graded coloring, tonal printingизображе́ние релье́фа, стереоскопи́ческое — stereoscopic relief presentationизображе́ние релье́фа, фотографи́ческое — gelatin relief imageсветлопо́льное изображе́ние ( микроскопа) — bright-field imageсере́бряное изображе́ние ( в фотографии) — silver imageскры́тое изображе́ние — latent imageсма́занное изображе́ние — smeared pictureизображе́ние с рва́ными края́ми — ragged pictureстереоскопи́ческое изображе́ние — stereoscopic picture, three-dimensional presentation, 3-d imageстигмати́ческое изображе́ние — stigmatic [punctual] imageстробоскопи́ческое изображе́ние — stroboscopic [frozen] imageсфери́ческое изображе́ние — spherical representationсфокуси́рованное изображе́ние — in focus imageсхемати́ческое изображе́ние — diagrammatic representation, sketchтемнопо́льное изображе́ние ( микроскопа) — dark-field imageтенево́е изображе́ние — shadowgraph, direct-shadow image, skiagraphтопографи́ческое изображе́ние — topographic(al) expression, representation of ground, terrain representationто́чечное изображе́ние — point imageтрёхме́рное изображе́ние — stereoscopic picture, three-dimensional presentation, 3-d imageизображе́ние усло́вными зна́ками — symbolizationфотографи́ческое изображе́ние — photographic imageфотоэлектростати́ческое изображе́ние — photoelectrostatic imageизображе́ние фу́нкции по Лапла́су — Laplace transform of a functionцветно́е изображе́ние — colour imageчё́рно-бе́лое изображе́ние — black-and-white pictureчё́ткое изображе́ние — sharp [crisp] imageчрезме́рно контра́стное изображе́ние — hard [harsh] imageштрихово́е изображе́ние — line imageэлектри́ческое изображе́ние — electrical imageэлектро́нное изображе́ние — electronic image -
40 фотоаппарат
* * *фотоаппара́т м.
(photographic) cameraзаряжа́ть или разряжа́ть фотоаппара́т, напр. при дневно́м све́те — load or unload the camera, e. g., in daylightзерка́льный фотоаппара́т — reflex cameraзерка́льный, однообъекти́вный фотоаппара́т — single-lens reftex cameraкрупноформа́тный фотоаппара́т — large size process cameraмалоформа́тный фотоаппара́т — miniature cameraмикроформа́тный фотоаппара́т — sub-miniature cameraминиатю́рный фотоаппара́т — sub-miniature cameraпласти́ночный фотоаппара́т — plate cameraплё́ночный фотоаппара́т — film cameraподво́дный фотоаппара́т — underwater cameraрепродукцио́нный фотоаппара́т — reproduction [copying, process] (still) cameraрепродукцио́нный, вертика́льный фотоаппара́т — vertical process cameraрепродукцио́нный, горизонта́льный фотоаппара́т — floor-type [overhead] process cameraрепродукцио́нный, двухко́мнатный фотоаппара́т полигр. — darkroom process cameraрепродукцио́нный, подвесно́й фотоаппара́т полигр. — suspension-type process cameraскладно́й фотоаппара́т — folding cameraстереоскопи́ческий фотоаппара́т — stereo(scopic) cameraширокоплё́ночный фотоаппара́т — roll-film camera
См. также в других словарях:
Photographic reproduction — Фотографическое репродуцирование, фоторепродуцирование; фотокопирование; Фотографическая копия … Краткий толковый словарь по полиграфии
reproduction — noun 1 producing babies/animals/plants ADJECTIVE ▪ animal, human, plant ▪ biological ▪ asexual, sexual ▪ artificial … Collocations dictionary
reproduction — /ree preuh duk sheuhn/, n. 1. the act or process of reproducing. 2. the state of being reproduced. 3. something made by reproducing an original; copy; duplicate: a photographic reproduction; a reproduction of a Roman vase. 4. Biol. the natural… … Universalium
reproduction */*/ — UK [ˌriːprəˈdʌkʃ(ə)n] / US [ˌrɪprəˈdʌkʃ(ə)n] noun Word forms reproduction : singular reproduction plural reproductions 1) [uncountable] biology the process of having babies or of producing young animals or plants sexual reproduction 2) a)… … English dictionary
reproduction — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) Procreation Nouns 1. reproduction, sexual reproduction; [re]generation, propagation, multiplication, reenactment, repetition, procreation, fructification, breeding, begetting; ontogeny, oogamy; baby boom … English dictionary for students
reproduction — re|pro|duc|tion [ ,riprə dʌkʃən ] noun ** 1. ) uncount the process of having babies or producing young animals or plants: sexual reproduction 2. ) uncount the process of making a copy of something or of doing something again in the same way as… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
Reproduction fees — are charged by image collections for the right to reproduce images in publications. This is not the same as a copyright fee, but is charged separately, as is the cost of the provision of the image. It can be charged where an image is out of… … Wikipedia
Photographic film — This article is mainly concerned with still photography film. For motion picture film, please see film stock. Photographic film is a sheet of plastic (polyester, nitrocellulose or cellulose acetate) coated with an emulsion containing light… … Wikipedia
photographic — adj. Photographic is used with these nouns: ↑archive, ↑assignment, ↑collection, ↑copy, ↑equipment, ↑evidence, ↑exhibit, ↑exhibition, ↑illustration, ↑image, ↑imagery, ↑ … Collocations dictionary
Florida Photographic Collection — Featuring over 150,000 digitized photographs from the State Archives of Florida, the Florida Photographic Collection is the most complete online portrait of Florida available one that draws its strength from family pictures, the homes of… … Wikipedia
Tone Reproduction — Tone Mapping oder Tone Reproduction bezeichnet die Dynamikkompression von HDR Bildern, also von digitalen Bildern mit hohem Helligkeitsumfang. Beim Tone Mapping wird der Kontrastumfang eines HDR Bildes verringert, um es auf herkömmlichen… … Deutsch Wikipedia