True Colour Techniques Glossary True Colour This is used to describe 24-bit colour mode that can produce as many as 16.7million colours, creating a ‘true colour' image.
True Colour. Colour that has a depth of 24-bits per pixel and a total of 16.7 million colours. TTL. (Through the Lens). Used when talking about either an auto focus or auto exposure system that works "through" the camera's lens.
True Colour Describes the colour output on a monitor or printer. Requires at least 16 million colour nuances.
The question of true colour and 16.77 million colours were rare in the past especially in film photography while it is a prevailing reality at the present time.
I like your tips on varying the shutter speed to get true colours. However your photo of the moon over the trees looks a bit suspect.
These two discoveries helped usher in the era of modern physics, laying the foundation for future work in such fields as special relativity and quantum mechanics. He is also known for creating the first true colour photograph in 1861.
Digital images are often described by the number of bits used to represent each pixel. i.e. a 1-bit image is monochrome; an 8-bit image supports 256 colours or grayscales; while 24 or 32-bit supports true colour.
Because of this a polarising filter can do two things: remove white haze from the sky rendering it a deep blue, and remove white reflections from surfaces revealing their true colour.
See also: Photograph, Digital, Camera, Print, Image
 
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