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Blowup

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Blowup
Magnification; a photograph that is made bigger than the negative or slide.
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Blowup - An enlargement created from a smaller slide and printed onto paper or some other light-sensitive surface.
Charge Coupled Device (CCD) - A type of image sensor used in digital cameras.

Blowup
Bounce Lighting
Flash or tungsten light bounced off a reflector (such as the ceiling or walls) or attachment that fits on the flash (like the LumiQuest's Pocket Bouncer) to give the effect of natural or available light.

blowup:
An enlargement of a picture; or the process of enlarging a picture (to blow up).
blur: ...

Blowup
An enlargement; a print that is made larger than the negative or slide. Slang for an enlargement, a print that is made larger than the negative or slide.

Digital Blowup - Lasting Impressions - Size Matters - Put Your Best Print Forward - How Much Space?

Blowup
See Enlargement.
Bracketing
Taking a series of pictures of a subject using a range of exposures. In unfamiliar lighting conditions this ensures that at least one image will be correctly exposed.

Blowup - See "Enlargement."

Bounce Lighting - Any light bounced off a reflector (such as the ceiling or walls) to give the effect of natural or available light.

FIGURE 3a: A blowup from the 16-megapixel camera. FIGURE 3b: A blowup from the resed-up 6-megapixel camera. Whether scanned or photographed with a digital camera, an image that finds its way into a digital form needs some sharpening.

Here are two images, you are looking at a small blowup from the center of each image, the top one was shot at ISO 100 and the bottom one at ISO 1600.

I know a whole generation of people whose idea of the life of a photographer was the romanticized image of the existentially challenged fashion photographer in the classic Michelangelo Antonioni 1960s film, "Blowup.

BLOW-UP - As a noun, blow-up (or blowup) is another term for an enlargement of a photographic print. As a verb, it is the actual enlarging of the image, as in "Please blow up this negative to an 11" X 14" print." ...

For any kind of blowup prints 35mm film slr's are best. But i am not at all kidding the DSLR's. They r also good. I am basically a commercial photographer, so maximum time i use the dslr's.

Michelangelo Antonioni's 1966 hit movie "Blowup" had appeared a few years before and was still playing art houses.

enlargement
a reproduction or copy larger than the original; also called blowup.

picture used (35 mm anamorphic): 0.945 in (24.00 mm) by 0.394 in (10.00 mm)
picture used (70 mm blowup): 0.945 in (24.00 mm) by 0.430 in (10.92 mm)
picture used (35 mm flat 1.85): 0.945 in (24.00 mm) by 0.511 in (12.97 mm) ...

See also: Image, Camera, Photograph, Light, Time

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