Article
Article
- Physics
- Photography
- Cinematography
- Engineering & Materials
- Graphic arts and photographic materials
- Cinematography
Cinematography
Article By:
DiGiulio, Edmund M. Cinema Products Corporation, Los Angeles, California.
Last reviewed:October 2019
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1036/1097-8542.136500
- Traditional Cinematography
- Cameras
- Motors
- Camera support equipment
- Film
- Projectors
- Wide-screen processes
- Screen formats
- Digital Cinematography
- Image capture
- Film digitizing
- Image editing
- Image display
- Standards
- Related Primary Literature
- Additional Reading
The process of producing the illusion of a moving picture. Cinematography includes two phases: taking the picture with a camera and showing the picture with a projector. The camera captures the action by taking a series of still pictures at regular intervals; the projector flashes these pictures on a screen at the same frequency, thus producing an image on the screen that appears to move. This illusion is possible because of the persistence of vision of the human eye. The still pictures appear on the screen many times a second, and although the screen is dark equally as long as it is lighted by the projected image, they do not seem to be a series of pictures but appear to the viewer to be one continuous picture.
The content above is only an excerpt.
for your institution. Subscribe
To learn more about subscribing to AccessScience, or to request a no-risk trial of this award-winning scientific reference for your institution, fill in your information and a member of our Sales Team will contact you as soon as possible.
to your librarian. Recommend
Let your librarian know about the award-winning gateway to the most trustworthy and accurate scientific information.
About AccessScience
AccessScience provides the most accurate and trustworthy scientific information available.
Recognized as an award-winning gateway to scientific knowledge, AccessScience is an amazing online resource that contains high-quality reference material written specifically for students. Contributors include more than 10,000 highly qualified scientists and 46 Nobel Prize winners.
MORE THAN 8700 articles covering all major scientific disciplines and encompassing the McGraw-Hill Encyclopedia of Science & Technology and McGraw-Hill Yearbook of Science & Technology
115,000-PLUS definitions from the McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific and Technical Terms
3000 biographies of notable scientific figures
MORE THAN 19,000 downloadable images and animations illustrating key topics
ENGAGING VIDEOS highlighting the life and work of award-winning scientists
SUGGESTIONS FOR FURTHER STUDY and additional readings to guide students to deeper understanding and research
LINKS TO CITABLE LITERATURE help students expand their knowledge using primary sources of information