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American animated black-and-white films (611 P) This page was last edited on 15 September 2024, at 06:51 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons ...
Animated PNG 8-bit transparency. Raster file formats that support transparency include GIF, PNG, BMP, TIFF, TGA and JPEG 2000, through either a transparent color or an alpha channel. Most vector formats implicitly support transparency because they simply avoid putting any objects at a given point. This includes EPS and WMF. For vector graphics ...
Because most if not all of the images in these sub-categories are fair use images of DVDs, manga, TV, etc., all of the sub-categories should be tagged with the magic word __NOGALLERY__. This is per fair use criterion No. 9, which states that "Fair use images may be used only in the article namespace. Used outside article space, they are not ...
Pages in category "American animated black-and-white films" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 611 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
5.01 prints palette images with black (or dark gray) backgrounds under Windows 98, sometimes with radically altered colors. [80] 6.0 fails to display PNG images of 4097 or 4098 bytes in size. [81] 6.0 cannot open a PNG file that contains one or more zero-length IDAT chunks. This issue was first fixed in security update 947864 (MS08-024).
GIF was one of the first two image formats commonly used on Web sites, the other being the black-and-white XBM. [5] In September 1995 Netscape Navigator 2.0 added the ability for animated GIFs to loop. While GIF was developed by CompuServe, it used the Lempel–Ziv–Welch (LZW) lossless data compression algorithm patented by Unisys in 1985.
Japanese manga has developed a visual language or iconography for expressing emotion and other internal character states. This drawing style has also migrated into anime, as many manga are adapted into television shows and films and some of the well-known animation studios are founded by manga artists.
This 19th-century book illustration copies a 12th-century English image of a man wearing a hooded tunic. The garment's style and form can be traced back to Medieval Europe when the preferred clothing for Catholic monks included a hood called a cowl attached to a tunic or robes, [6] and a chaperon or hooded cape was very commonly worn by any outdoors worker.