Burning-in Darkroom technique used to darken chosen areas of a print. Numerous image-editing programs also include a similar tool to darken pixels, e.g Photoshop Search SWPP and BPPA Information provided by: SWPP BPPA More Photographic Terms ...
Burning-in Techniques Glossary Burning-in Darkroom technique used to darken selected areas of a print. Several image-editing programs also include a similar tool to darken pixels.
Burning-In Giving additional exposure to part of the image projected on an enlarger easel to make that area of the print darker.
Burning-In Basically, a darkroom process that gives additional exposure to part of the image projected on an enlarger easel to make that area of the print darker.
Burning-in (or Burn-in) To make an area of a print darker. This is accomplished after the basic exposure by extending the exposure time (or opening the aperture) to allow extra image-forming light to darken areas of the print while holding back ...
Burning-in tool. Used to darken a digital image, can be targeted to affect just the Shadows, Midtones or Highlights. Opposite to Dodge. Part of the toning trio, which also includes the Sponge.
burning-in additional light exposure given to part of the image projected on an enlarger easel to make that area of the print darker, after the basic exposure, while holding back the light from the rest of the image.
Burning-in means darkening all tones in a small area-not some more than others. Changing the Brightness slider of Brightness/Contrast nicely mimics a true burning-in effect.
BURNING or Burning-in - Also known as "Printing in." In a darkroom, providing extra exposure to an area of the print to make it darker, while blocking light from the rest of the print.
(Redirected from Burning-in) Jump to: navigation, search Dodging and burning are terms used in photography for a technique used during the printing process to manipulate the exposure of a selected area(s) on a photographic print, ...
This manipulation may be dodging to prevent part of the image from getting too dark or it may be burning-in to produce detail from a part of the negative that is too dense.
In conventional photography effects could only be applied by spending painstaking hours in your darkroom, dodging or burning-in parts of an image, multi-exposing photographic paper, ...
The aforementioned dodging and burning-in techniques were developed precisely because of this limitation. Photoshop gives us modern equivalents (my favorite is the Shadow/Highlight tool in CS2).
Let's add emphasis to our key elements in the darkroom by lightening (dodging) what's important and darkening (burning-in) what's not: Burned and dodged for emphasis.
Bounced flash: Flash illumination reflected from a ceiling or wall being diffused. Bracketing: Taking extra shots of the same subject with different exposures when unsure of the correct exposure. Burning-in: Extra exposure given to an area of a ...
See also: Burning, Image, Print, Photograph, Photography
 
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