30-day wash rule - translation to ρωσικά
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Διαδικτυακό λεξικό

30-day wash rule - translation to ρωσικά

RULE IN FILM EDITING
30 degree rule; 20mm rule
  • The relationship between 30 degrees and the binocular human experience.

wash drawing         
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VISUAL ARTS TECHNIQUE
Wash painting; Wash drawing; Wash Drawing; Pen and wash; Line-and-washing drawing; Wash (painting)
чертёж с отмывкой
wash drawing         
  • pages=121–}}</ref>
VISUAL ARTS TECHNIQUE
Wash painting; Wash drawing; Wash Drawing; Pen and wash; Line-and-washing drawing; Wash (painting)

['wɔʃdrɔ:iŋ]

живопись

акварель (рисунок)

рисунок тушью размывкой

строительное дело

чертёж с отмывкой

wash drawing         
  • pages=121–}}</ref>
VISUAL ARTS TECHNIQUE
Wash painting; Wash drawing; Wash Drawing; Pen and wash; Line-and-washing drawing; Wash (painting)
рисунок размывкой

Ορισμός

Серебреники
I Сере́бреники

крестьяне в Северо-Восточной Руси 14-16 вв., взявшие в долг у господина серебро как средство платежа. Помимо самого долга, С. должны были выплачивать проценты либо деньгами, либо несением в пользу господина отработочных повинностей ("изделье"). Первоначально "выход" С. (см. Выход крестьянский) не был ограничен определённым сроком, а при переходе на "чёрные земли" (собственность феодального государства, находившаяся в пользовании крестьянских и посадских общин) им в некоторых случаях предоставлялась возможность и после "выхода" выплачивать господину долг в рассрочку и без процентов. Начиная с середины 15 в. срок перехода С. в отдельных районах был ограничен Юрьевым днём (См. Юрьев день), а выплата долга стала обязательным предварительным условием "выхода". Судебником 1497 (См. Судебник 1497) эти ограничения "выхода" были распространены на всех частновладельческих крестьян, в том числе на всех С.

Б. Н. Флоря.

II Сере́бреники

сребреники, первые русские монеты, чеканившиеся в конце 10 - начале 11 вв. Чеканка С. началась при Владимире I Святославиче. Выпуск С. связан с резким сокращением притока в Южную Русь Дирхемов. Вместе с тем он был обусловлен политическими мотивами - задачами упрочения суверенного Русского государства. На С. имеются изображения князей, славянские подписи ("Владимир на столе, а се его серебро") и обязательный родовой знак Рюриковичей. С. являются также древнейшими памятниками русской письменности. Клады С. или отдельные монеты обнаружены на обширной территории от Тамани до Новгородских земель. Наиболее известны Нежинский клад 1852 (около 200 серебряных монет), Митьковский 1955 (13 серебряных монет). Найдено более 300 С.

Βικιπαίδεια

30-degree rule

The 30-degree rule is a basic film editing guideline that states the camera should move at least 30 degrees relative to the subject between successive shots of the same subject. If the camera moves less than 30 degrees, the transition between shots can look like a jump cut—which could jar the audience and take them out of the story. The audience might focus on the film technique rather than the narrative itself.

The 30 degree change of angle makes two successive shots different enough to not look like a jump cut. However, camera movement should stay on one side of the subject to follow the 180-degree rule.

A similar principle applies to changing the focal length of the lens; a change of less than 20 mm while keeping the same angle of view has a similar perception, and the 30 degree rule is often called the "20 mm/30 degree rule" for this reason. Although the axial cut does not follow the 30-degree guideline, effectively making it a specialized type of jump cut, its adherence to the 20mm rule has allowed it to gain an important place within classical continuity.

French filmmaker George Méliès, producer of silent black-and-white film, made films before the 30 degree rule was conceived. Méliès inspired succeeding filmmakers to heed this rule of angle when cutting between similar or nearly identical clips. When Mèliés himself made his famous A Trip to the Moon (1902), he edited together film clips of the same framing and with the same angle, after changing the scene between the shots, to make it look like there was no cut at all. It was the world's first attempt to make special effects, made up of jump cuts.

As Timothy Corrigan and Patricia White suggest in The Film Experience, "The rule aims to emphasize the motivation for the cut by giving a substantially different view of the action. The transition between two shots less than 30 degrees apart might be perceived as unnecessary or discontinuous—in short, visible." Especially in post-continuity editing, there are some cases where jump cuts are used in montage or for aesthetic effect, but generally filmmakers try to avoid them otherwise.

The 30 degree rule is a special case of a more general dictum that states that the cut is jarring if two shots are so similar in angle and distance that it appears there is no reason for the cut. In his book In The Blink of an Eye, editor Walter Murch states:

"[We] have difficulty accepting the kind of displacements that are neither subtle nor total: Cutting from a full-figure master shot, for instance, to a slightly tighter shot that frames the actors from the ankles up. The new shot in this case is different enough to signal that something has changed, but not different enough to make us re-evaluate its context."