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pinhole photography
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| depth of field | The range of distance in a photograph that appears to be in focus. |
| focal length | The distance between the aperture and the focal plane. |
| negative | An image in which the brightness values are reversed. |
| aperture | The opening in a camera that controls the amount of light in an exposure. |
| focal (film) plane | The surface in a camera where the image forms. |
| vignetting | The effect from blocking the light at the edge of an image. |
| shutter | The device in a camera that controls the amount of time light is allowed in an exposure. |
| angle of view | The area of a scene that a lens or pinhole camera covers or sees. |
| telephoto | A lens or pinhole camera that makes a subject appear larger than a normal lens and has a longer focal length. |
| exposure | The total amount of light allowed to act on a photographic material; the amount or intensity of light X the amount of time. |
| format | The size of the negative. |
| wide angle | A lens or pinhole camera that has a shorter focal length and a field of view that includes more area than a normal lens. |
| ghost image | An object that is only partially recorded on film or paper and looks translucent. |
| subject blur | Streaking in a photograph of an object that was moving during exposure. |
| camera blur | Streaks in a photograph made by moving the camera during exposure. |