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Person passed out on sidewalk – New York City, 2008 – shot using Dutch angle. In filmmaking and photography, the Dutch angle, also known as Dutch tilt, canted angle, vortex plane, or oblique angle, is a type of camera shot that involves setting the camera at an angle so that the shot is composed with vertical lines at an angle to the side of the frame, or so that the horizon line of the ...
What you're showing with the Caligari still is a high-angle shot, not a Dutch angle-shot. A Dutch angle is defined by tilting your camera to the side so all horizontals and verticals become tilted. Look at the three people in the Caligari still, they're all standing upright, perfectly alligned and parallel to the sides of the picture.
Illustration from van Neck's Het Tweede Boeck showing Dutch activities on the shore of Mauritius, as well as the first published depiction of a dodo bird, above left. Following the success of the first Dutch expedition to Indonesia in 1597, Van Neck was chosen to lead a second expedition in 1598, with the purpose of bringing back various spices.
It originated from the Germanic root for "narrow" (compare German and Dutch eng = "narrow"), meaning "the Narrow [Water]", i.e., the Schlei estuary; the root would be *h₂enǵʰ, "tight". The name derives from "hook" (as in angling for fish), in reference to the shape of the peninsula where they lived; Indo-European linguist Julius Pokorny ...
The company was expelled in 1638, however, after the sultan waged a war against the Dutch and burned much of the company's possessions around the port. [19] [12] Fort Tatas, a Dutch fortress in Banjarmasin, 1924. Similarly, an English company agreed upon a treaty with the sultanate in 1698 but was expelled from the region in 1707.
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As was the usual case in the 1640s and 50s, the Dutch colluded with local powers to throw out their European competitors. In 1677 the Dutch occupied Pulau Sangir and, two years later, the Dutch governor of Maluku, Robert Padtbrugge, visited Manado. Out of this visit came a treaty with the local Minahasan chiefs, which led to domination by the ...
Perkedel (from Javindo frikadellen) are vegetable fritters from Indonesian cuisine. [1] Most common perkedel are made from mashed potatoes, [2] [better source needed] yet there are other popular variations, such as perkedel jagung (peeled maize perkedel) and perkedel tahu (tofu perkedel) and perkedel ikan (minced fish perkedel).