(Askeri) YARIM TON: Boy ve şekil açısından değişen bir seri eşit aralıklı detay ve ton değerleri ile gösterilen ve temsil ettikleri tonları yoğunlaştıran herhangi bir fotomekanik baskılı yüzey veya görüntü
A printing term Printed pictures in Black and White are made up of printed dots The intensity of the dots makes the different shading between pale and dark The number of dots per inch is called the Screen When printing 4 colour half tone the pattern of dots is made up of 4 dots close together The intensity of each dot in each colour determines the colour the eye actually sees e g a pattern of blue and yellow dots will be seen as green by the eye
The reproduction of a continuous-tone image on a device which does not directly support continuous output This is done by displaying or printing pattern of small dots which from a distance can simulate the desired output color or intensity These methods are used extensively in magazines and newspapers
Process of breaking a continuous tone image into dots for printing (Using a magnifying glass, the dots can be seen, but give the illusion of continuous tone or color to the naked eye )
The process that converts continuous tone (the real photo) into a picture by converting the contents into scaled dots The larger the dot, the darker the image
A photochemical process to transfer a photographic image to a relief plate that can be printed on the same press as type The continuous tones of the photograph are converted into a pattern of tiny dots (larger and closer together in the dark areas) that are visible under magnification In duotone printing, two passes of the press are used The process was first used commercially in 1880
Photographic process that converts a continuous-tone photograph to line art (black & white, no grays, solid dots of varying sizes) hard copy Any output from a machine that is readable copy on paper Examples are typewriter copy and computer printouts
An image that can be reproduced with ordinary type on the same printing press The tones of gray in the photograph are screened to a pattern of dots (close together in dark areas, farther apart in light areas) that give the illusion of continuous tone
The reproduction of a continuous tone image (such as a photograph or artwork having a gradation of tones) through a crossline or contact screen which converts the image into dots of various sizes, uniformly spaced and being capable of rendering both highlights, shadows and all gradation in between (See continuous tone image)
The reproduction of continuous-tone artwork such as photography or pencil sketches, through a digital screening process which converts shaded images into solid ink dots of various sizes and concentrations A few, tiny dots will produce highlight areas A heavy concentration of large dots will produce mid-tone and shadow areas
The method by which photographs and other images are printed by using cells of dots to simulate the tones between light and dark A printing press is not able to change the tone of ink, therefore dots of color are used to trick the eye into seeing a continuous tone image To accomplish this, the photo is shot through a mesh of a screen that breaks the image into tiny dots The closer the lines of the screen, the smaller the dots and the more dots per inch, leading to a crisper image
A method of generating on press or on a laser printer an image that requires varying densities or shades to accurately render the image This is achieved by representing the image as a pattern of dots of varying size Larger dots represent darker areas, and smaller dots represent lighter areas of an image
Process of reducing an image as a series of various sized dots within a fixed grid An image made by photographing an image through a screen so that the detail is reproduced with dots The process still gives the illusion of continuous, smooth image
A picture in which the gradations of light are obtained by the relative darkness and density of tiny dots produced by photographing the subject through a fine screen
Having, consisting of, or pertaining to, half tones; pertaining to or designating plates, processes, or the pictures made by them, in which gradation of tone in the photograph is reproduced by a graduated system of dotted and checkered spots, usually nearly invisible to the unaided eye, produced by the interposition between the camera and the object of a screen
n A printed reproduction of a photograph or other illustration, using evenly spaced spots of varying diameter to produce apparent shades of gray The darker the shade at a particular point in the image, the larger the corresponding spot in the halftone In traditional publishing, halftones are created by photographing an image through a screen In desktop publishing, each halftone spot is represented by an area containing a number of dots printed by a laser printer or digital imagesetter In both cases, the frequency of the halftone dots is measured in lines per inch Higher printer resolution enables effective use of higher frequencies of halftone dots, enhancing image quality See also dithering, gray scale
A pattern of tiny black and white dots that appear to the human eye as shades of gray; a photograph or other image converted to such a pattern for commercial printing
{i} middle-tone, shade or value between dark and light (Art); technique in which shadows are reproduced as tiny closely spaced dots (Printing); print made using this technique
Screening of image with a series of different sized dots to provide the appearance of continuous tone on a printed piece of paper (See also “LPI” and “continuous tone”)
The representation of a continuous-tone image as a series of dots that look like gray tones when printed Also called a screened halftone because traditionally the original image is photographed through a finely ruled screen, the density of which varies depending on the printer's capabilities See also AM screening, FM screening, and screening
The reproduction of continuous-tone artwork (such as a photograph) through the application of a screen that converts the image into dots of various sizes (See the resolution section in the Building Electronic File Module)
An image that can be reproduced on the same printing press with ordinary type The tones in the photograph are screened to a pattern of dots (close together in dark areas, farther apart in light areas) that give the illusion of continuous tone
The reproduction of continuous-tone images (photos), through a screening process, which converts the image into dots of various sizes and equal spacing
An illustration reproduced by breaking down the original tone into a pattern of dots of varying size Light areas have small dots and darker areas or shadows have larger dots
A process whereby gradations of tone in a photograph, drawing, or painting are translated into small dots by being photographed through a glass or contact film screen The screen simulates the grays produced by commercial printing by reducing tones to a series of dots These dots vary in size, shape, and spacing in direct proportion to the tones they represent
the reproduction of continuous-tone artwork, such as a photograph, using a contact screen over the film which converts the image into black and white dots of various sizes