mosaic$50478$ - translation to ολλανδικά
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mosaic$50478$ - translation to ολλανδικά

PICTURE THAT HAS BEEN DIVIDED INTO TILED SECTIONS, EACH OF WHICH IS REPLACED WITH ANOTHER MATCHING PHOTO; AT LOW MAGNIFICATIONS, THE INDIVIDUAL PIXELS APPEAR AS THE PRIMARY IMAGE, WHILE CLOSE EXAMINATION SHOWS THAT IT CONSISTS OF MANY SMALLER PHOTOS
Photomosaic; Image mosaic; Mosaic image; Photo mosaic; Mosaic photo; Video mosaic; Photograph mosaic
  • ''Blue Horse I'']]
  • A photographic mosaic of a [[sea gull]] made from pictures of [[bird]]s and other [[nature]] photos using [[hexagon]]al tiles

mosaic      
adj. Mozaïsch
Law of Moses         
THE TORAH OR THE FIRST FIVE BOOKS OF THE HEBREW BIBLE
Mosiac law; Mosaic law; Mosaic Law; Laws of Moses; Mosaic laws; Mosaic Laws; Mosaic religion; Law in ancient Israel
de Wet van Mozes (wetboek dat Mozes aan Israël gaf, de eerste vijf boeken van Mozes)
Mosaic law         
THE TORAH OR THE FIRST FIVE BOOKS OF THE HEBREW BIBLE
Mosiac law; Mosaic law; Mosaic Law; Laws of Moses; Mosaic laws; Mosaic Laws; Mosaic religion; Law in ancient Israel
wet van Mozes (het joods geloof, het jodendom)

Βικιπαίδεια

Photographic mosaic

In the field of photographic imaging, a photographic mosaic, also known under the term Photomosaic, is a picture (usually a photograph) that has been divided into (usually equal sized) tiled sections, each of which is replaced with another photograph that matches the target photo. When viewed at low magnifications, the individual pixels appear as the primary image, while close examination reveals that the image is in fact made up of many hundreds or thousands of smaller images. Most of the time they are a computer-created type of montage.

There are two kinds of mosaic, depending on how the matching is done. In the simpler kind, each part of the target image is averaged down to a single color. Each of the library images is also reduced to a single color. Each part of the target image is then replaced with one from the library where these colors are as similar as possible. In effect, the target image is reduced in resolution (by downsampling), and then each of the resulting pixels is replaced with an image whose average color matches that pixel.

In the more advanced kind of photographic mosaic, the target image is not downsampled, and the matching is done by comparing each pixel in the rectangle to the corresponding pixel from each library image. The rectangle in the target is then replaced with the library image that minimizes the total difference. This requires much more computation than the simple kind, but the results can be much better since the pixel-by-pixel matching can preserve the resolution of the target image.

Originally, the term photomosaic referred to compound photographs created by stitching together a series of adjacent pictures of a scene. Space scientists have been assembling mosaics of this kind since at least as early as the Soviet satellite missions to the Moon in the late 1950s. The name Photomosaic and an implementation concept were trademarked by Robert Silvers' Runaway Technology, Inc.