scanned artwork - определение. Что такое scanned artwork
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Что (кто) такое scanned artwork - определение

Aged artwork
Найдено результатов: 103
Artwork (graphic arts)         
DRAWING USED IN VARIOUS PROCESSES TO TRANSFER AN IMAGE ONTO A SUBSTRATE
Art layout drawing; Artwork layout
Artwork (also known as art layoutdrawing) is a type of drawing that serves a graphical representation of an image for its reproduction onto a substrate via various processes, such as silkscreen, label making and other printing methods. Transfer of the image often involves a photographic process.
Counter-scanning         
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IN PHYSICAL MICRO AND NANOTOPOGRAPHY MEASURING INSTRUMENTS LIKE SCANNING PROBE MICROSCOPE
Counter-scanned images
Counter-scanning (CS) is a scanning method that allows correcting raster distortions caused by drift of the probe of scanning microscope relative to the measured surface. During counter-scanning two surface scans, viz.
Aging (artwork)         
Aging is a process by which an artwork, typically a painting or sculpture, is made to appear old. It is meant to emulate the natural deterioration that can occur over many decades or centuries.
The Blue Trees (Dimopoulos)         
The Blue Trees is a performance and installation artwork by the artist Konstantin Dimopoulos that uses a colour transformation to provoke discussion about global deforestation. The trunk and branches of live trees are coloured blue using a biologically safe natural pigment in water.
Computer graphics         
  • Example of [[Computer animation]] produced using [[Motion capture]]
  • [[Stable Diffusion]] output for the prompt "an astronaut riding a horse, by [[Hiroshige]]", 2022
  • Example showing effect of vector graphics versus raster (bitmap) graphics
  • sprite]]s (left) and masks (right)
  • CT]] scan of a forearm with different colour schemes for muscle, fat, bone, and blood
  • Donkey Kong]]'' was one of the [[video games]] that helped to popularize computer graphics to a mass audience in the 1980s.
  • [[Fractal landscape]], an example of [[computer-generated imagery]]
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  • Killing Floor]]'', built in [[Unreal Engine 2]]. [[Personal computer]]s and [[console video game]]s took a great graphical leap forward in the 2000s, becoming able to display graphics in [[real time computing]] that had previously only been possible pre-rendered and/or on business-level hardware.
  • A [[diamond plate]] texture rendered close-up using [[physically based rendering]] principles – increasingly an active area of research for computer graphics in the 2010s
  • In the enlarged portion of the image individual pixels are rendered as squares and can be easily seen.
  • ''[[Pong]]'' arcade version
  • ''Quarxs'', series poster, [[Maurice Benayoun]], [[François Schuiten]], 1992
  • SAGE]] Sector Control Room
  • Example of shading
  • ''[[Spacewar!]]'' running on the [[Computer History Museum]]'s [[PDP-1]]
PICTURES AND GRAPHICS, POSSIBLY ANIMATED, THAT ARE GENERATED USING COMPUTERS, FOR TRANSFORMING AND COMPOSITING VARIOUS SOURCES OF IMAGES OR DATA WITH PRECISE DEFINITIONS OF STYLE, LAYOUT, EFFECTS, SEQUENCING AND SYNCHRONIZATION
Computer Painting; Computer painting; CG artwork; Computer Graphics; CG Artwork; CG imagery; Graphical computing; History of computer graphics; Graphics primitives; Triangle primitives; Cg artwork; Applications of computer graphics; Computer-graphics
Computer graphics deals with generating images with the aid of computers. Today, computer graphics is a core technology in digital photography, film, video games, cell phone and computer displays, and many specialized applications.
Lost artworks         
  • Portrait of a Courtesan]]'' by [[Caravaggio]], formerly in the [[Kaiser-Friedrich-Museum]], Berlin
  • [[Jean-Baptiste Oudry]]'s ''The White Duck,'' which was stolen in 1990
  • A lost Christus head by [[Annibale Carracci]]
  • Fresco of Jupiter on Mount Olympus by Mario Bragaldi in the National Museum of Brazil. Picture taken a few months before the fire
  • A lost self-portrait, by [[Raphael]]
  • [[Grisaille]] sketch of ''Magistrates of Brussels'', in the [[École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts]] in Paris
  • ''View of Auvers-sur-Oise'' by [[Paul Cézanne]]
PIECE OF ART THAT ONCE EXISTED
Lost artwork; Lost art; Lost works of art; Lost Art; Lost painting
Lost artworks are original pieces of art that credible sources indicate once existed but that cannot be accounted for in museums or private collections or are known to have been destroyed deliberately or accidentally, or neglected through ignorance and lack of connoisseurship.
Multi-role Electronically Scanned Array         
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TYPE OF AIRCRAFT RADAR
MESA radar; Multi-role Electronically Scanned Array radar
The Multi-role Electronically Scanned Array (MESA) is a surveillance radar system for the Boeing 737 AEW&C airborne early warning and control aircraft. The radar is produced by Northrop Grumman.
Passive electronically scanned array         
  • superpose]]) in front of the antenna to create a [[plane wave]], a beam of radio waves travelling in a specific direction θ.  The phase shifters delay the radio waves progressively going up the line so each antenna emits its wavefront later than the one below it.  This causes the resulting plane wave to be directed at an angle θ to the antenna.  The computer can alter the phase shifters to steer the beam to a new direction, very quickly.   The velocity of the radio waves is shown slowed down enormously.
ANTENNA IN WHICH THE BEAM OF RADIO WAVES CAN BE ELECTRONICALLY STEERED TO POINT IN DIFFERENT DIRECTIONS
Passive phased array radar; Passive Electronically Scanned Array; Passive phased array
A passive electronically scanned array (PESA), also known as passive phased array, is an antenna in which the beam of radio waves can be electronically steered to point in different directions (that is, a phased array antenna), in which all the antenna elements are connected to a single transmitter (such as a magnetron, a klystron or a travelling wave tube) and/or receiver.
Digital art         
  • [[Digital painting]]s are completed in much the same way as traditional ones.
  • ''Boundary Functions'' (1998) interactive floor projection by [[Scott Snibbe]] at the [[NTT InterCommunication Center]] in Tokyo.<ref name="bf">[http://snibbe.com/projects/interactive/boundaryfunctions "Boundary Functions"]</ref>
  • The [[Cave Automatic Virtual Environment]] at the [[University of Illinois]], [[Chicago]]
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  • Designer Madsen created a picture art generated by picture generator: [[Midjourney]]. Named "Road"
  • CGI]] for movies.
COLLECTIVE TERM FOR ART THAT IS GENERATED DIGITALLY WITH THE COMPUTER
Digital Art; Digital artwork; Computer-generated artwork; Digital artist; Digital artists; Digital Arts; Digital arts; Digital creativity; Wikipedia talk:Articles for creation/Digital Creativity; Digital Creativity; Digital creative; History of digital art
Digital art is an artistic work or practice that uses digital technology as part of the creative or presentation process. Since the 1960s, various names have been used to describe the process, including computer art and multimedia art.
Tolkien's artwork         
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ARTWORK BY J. R. R. TOLKIEN
The Book of Mazarbul; Book of Mazarbul; The Hill: Hobbiton-across-the-Water; J. R. R. Tolkien's artwork; Tolkien's painting
Tolkien's artwork was a key element of his creativity from the time when he began to write fiction. The philologist and author J.

Википедия

Aging (artwork)

Aging is a process by which an artwork, typically a painting or sculpture, is made to appear old. It is meant to emulate the natural deterioration that can occur over many decades or centuries. Although there may be "innocent" reasons for it, ageing is a technique very often used in art forgery.

Paintings deteriorate over time because they are created using essentially incompatible materials, with each having a different reaction to the changes in the environment, including light, temperature and relative humidity.

An oil painting consists of several layers, comprising the base canvas, a layer of gesso base coat, several layers of the oil-based paint and then several coats of varnish to protect the paint surface. With many different materials, it is understandable that each layer may dry at different rates and will also absorb and release moisture at different rates. When this occurs, expansion and contraction of the painting will result in a crazing of the varnish surface. This pattern of small cracks is known as craquelure. Along with the darkening or yellowing of the varnish surface, it is this visual representation of the cracking that is typically the primary indicator of ageing.

The purpose for artificially ageing is to create a finished product that accurately reflects an era or is consistent with the environment (usually period) into which it is to be placed.