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  2. Bristol board - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bristol_board

    Bristol board is commonly used for technical drawing, illustration projects, comic book art, and other two-dimensional art forms. It provides two working surfaces, front and back. This quality separates it from illustration board, which has only a front working surface. The surface texture is either plate or vellum.

  3. Poster session - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poster_session

    Presentations usually consist of affixing the research poster to a portable board with the researcher in attendance answering questions posed by passing colleagues. [3] The poster boards are often 4 by 6 feet (1.2 m × 1.8 m) or 4 by 8 feet (1.2 m × 2.4 m) and the size of the poster itself varies according to whether the conference organizers ...

  4. Microsoft PowerPoint - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microsoft_PowerPoint

    In contemporary operation, PowerPoint is used to create a file (called a "presentation" or "deck") containing a sequence of pages (called "slides" in the app) which usually have a consistent style (from template masters), and which may contain information imported from other apps or created in PowerPoint, including text, bullet lists, tables ...

  5. Display board - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Display_board

    A display board, also known as poster board, is a board-shaped material that is rigid and strong enough to stand on its own, and generally used paper or other materials affixed to it. Along with quad charts , display boards were an early form of fast communication developed by the National Weather Service of the United States Department of ...

  6. Film poster - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Film_poster

    The world's first film poster (to date), for 1895's L'Arroseur arrosé, by the Lumière brothers Rudolph Valentino in Blood and Sand, 1922. The first poster for a specific film, rather than a "magic lantern show", was based on an illustration by Marcellin Auzolle to promote the showing of the Lumiere Brothers film L'Arroseur arrosé at the Grand Café in Paris on December 26, 1895.