enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Monochrome photography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monochrome_photography

    Although digital images captured in color can be modified with a digital black and white process, some specialized cameras photograph natively in black and white with no option for color. [10] Black and white digital cameras are often designed without a Bayer filter, avoiding the demosaicing process and meaning that a camera will only capture ...

  3. White point - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_point

    A white point (often referred to as reference white or target white in technical documents) is a set of tristimulus values or chromaticity coordinates that serve to define the color "white" in image capture, encoding, or reproduction. [1] Depending on the application, different definitions of white are needed to give acceptable results.

  4. Binary image - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binary_image

    Binary images are also called bi-level or two-level. Pixel art made up of two colours is often referred to as 1-bit in reference to the single bit required to store each pixel. [2] The names black-and-white, B&W, monochrome or monochromatic are often used, but can also designate other image types with only one sample per pixel, such as ...

  5. Raster graphics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raster_graphics

    Using a raster to summarize a point pattern. Most computer images are stored in raster graphics formats or compressed variations, including GIF, JPEG, and PNG, which are popular on the World Wide Web. [4] [5] A raster data structure is based on a (usually rectangular, square-based) tessellation of the 2D plane into cells, each containing a ...

  6. Adobe Photoshop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adobe_Photoshop

    Adobe Photoshop is a raster graphics editor developed and published by Adobe for Windows and macOS.It was created in 1987 by Thomas and John Knoll.It is the most used tool for professional digital art, especially in raster graphics editing, and its name has become genericised as a verb (e.g. "to photoshop an image", "photoshopping", and "photoshop contest") [7] although Adobe disapproves of ...

  7. Grayscale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grayscale

    The contrast ranges from black at the weakest intensity to white at the strongest. [1] Grayscale images are distinct from one-bit bi-tonal black-and-white images, which, in the context of computer imaging, are images with only two colors: black and white (also called bilevel or binary images). Grayscale images have many shades of gray in between.

  8. Blend modes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blend_modes

    Blending with white gives white. Blending with black does not change the image. When the top layer contains a homogeneous color, this effect is equivalent to changing the output black point to this color, and (input) white point to the inverted color. The contrast is decreased when there is no clipping.

  9. Snapshot (photography) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snapshot_(photography)

    The term arose from the fascination of artists with the "classical" black-and-white vernacular snapshot, the characteristics of which were: 1) they were made with a hand-held camera on which the viewfinder could not easily 'see' the edges of the frame, [citation needed] unlike modern cheap digital cameras with electronic viewfinder, and so the ...