Preview screen. A small LCD display screen on the back of the camera used to compose or look at photographs. Prosumer. A very serious photographer who can be either an amateur or professional.
Preview screen: In photography is an image, normally positive, which has been produced by the action of light on paper or similar material coated with a light sensitive emulsion.
The preview screen before you start recording is similar to when shooting stills, but cropped to 16:9 to compose HD movies properly,and showing the recording time available on the memory card.
Up until the 1990s, SLR was the most advanced photographic preview system available, but the recent development and refinement of digital imaging technology with an on-camera live LCD preview screen has overshadowed SLR's popularity.
First, it offers a great large preview screen of your changes, which you can easily set to any channel.
Digital cameras usually have preview screens so you can have a rough idea of whether or not your picture turned out a second after you've taken it. Digital images are available immediately - there's no need to take the film to a lab.
5-inch screen comprised of liquid crystals that are stimulated by electric current to act as a viewfinder and/or preview screen of your frame.
Give them a Crayola VGA camera with large buttons and a small preview screen. You won't be printing large prints from the images this camera takes (640×480 resolution), but it's a great way to get your kids involved.
These suggestions offer a starting point, but you'll probably want to adjust to higher or lower speeds based on your specific setting. If you have a digital camera with a preview screen, ...
The photos are digital to begin with, so there is no need to have prints or negatives scanned to load the images onto a PC. Images can be viewed immediately using the camera's preview screen, ...
EVF - Electronic View Finder: LCD-preview screen that is just visible through an ocular, used in digital bridge cameras everset shutter - A shutter that is tripped by the sole energy of the finger pressing the release.
See also: Camera, Image, Flash, Speed, Photograph
 
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