enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. 180-degree rule - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/180-degree_rule

    The rule states that the camera should be kept on one side of an imaginary axis between two characters, so that the first character is always frame right of the second character. Moving the camera over the axis is called jumping the line or crossing the line ; breaking the 180-degree rule by shooting on all sides is known as shooting in the round .

  3. Aerial photographic and satellite image interpretation

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aerial_photographic_and...

    The advantage of high-altitude aerial photography is that it can record the information of a larger area by taking one photograph only. [5] However, high-altitude photographs cannot show as many details as low-altitude photographs since some objects, such as buildings, roads, and infrastructures, are of a very tiny in size in the image.

  4. Photographic lens design - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photographic_lens_design

    At the time, single combination lenses, which occupy one side of the diaphragm only, were still popular. Rudolph designed one with three cemented elements in 1893, with the option of fitting two of them together in a lens barrel as a compound lens, but it was found to be the same as the Dagor by C.P. Goerz, designed by Emil von Höegh. Rudolph ...

  5. Perspective distortion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perspective_distortion

    Consider an idealised Gaussian optical system, with the image and the object in the same medium.Thus, for an object in focus, the distance between the lens and image plane , the distance between lens and the object , and the focal length are related by the thin-lens equation:

  6. Panoramic photography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panoramic_photography

    Pinhole cameras of a variety of constructions can be used to make panoramic images. A popular design is the 'oatmeal box', a vertical cylindrical container in which the pinhole is made in one side and the film or photographic paper is wrapped around the inside wall opposite, and extending almost right to the edge of, the pinhole.

  7. Orthophoto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orthophoto

    An orthophotomosaic is a raster image mosaic made by merging or stitching orthophotos. The aerial or satellite photographs have been transformed to correct for perspective so that they appear to have been taken from vertically above at an infinite distance. [3] Google Earth images are of this type.

  8. Holography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holography

    The first element is a beam splitter that divides the beam into two identical beams, each aimed in different directions: One beam (known as the 'illumination' or 'object beam') is spread using lenses and directed onto the scene using mirrors. Some of the light scattered (reflected) from the scene then falls onto the recording medium.

  9. Dualphotography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dualphotography

    Dualphotography is the photography technique of simultaneously taking two photographs of one scene, thus capturing a scene from both sides of the photographic device at once. In other words, it is the practice of creating a photographic scene from two opposing or complementary sides of a single real-world situation.