Exposure of film to light during the development process for a longer time than is required to accurately produce the image
the subjection of photosensitive material to light source for a longer period than is necessary to accomplish the desired result
the act of exposing someone excessively to an influencing experience; "an overexposure to violence on televsion"
A condition in which too much light reaches the film, producing a dense negative or a very light slide
Exposing the image sensor to more light than is needed to render the scene as the eye sees it Results in a too light photograph
In exposure, when too much lighting strikes the film for a proper rendition of the scene Minor overexposure may cause a loss of details or texture in the scene highlights; severe overexposure will cause a serious deterioration of picture quality in color and black and white print film, and a complete loss of picture information with slide films
An excessive amount of light reaching the film resulting in a dense negative or a very bright slide or print
The result of giving a light-sensitive material excessive exposure, either by exposing it to too bright an image or by allowing light to act upon it for too long
A condition in which too much light has reached the film, producing a dense negative or a wash-out print or slide
A condition in which too much light reaches the film, producing a dense negative or a very light print or slide (Back To Top) P
Intentionally, or unintentionally allowing too much light to strike the film, causing a scene to look lighter, brighter, and more washed out than it would at a correct exposure
{i} excessive exposure; state of being exposed too long or to too much light (Photography)
Overexposure occurs when a photograph receives too much light It results in a loss of resolution (very fine detail), more graininess and less detail in highlight areas An overexposed negative is very dense resulting in light prints A slide has very light density
expose excessively; "As a child, I was overexposed to French movies" expose to too much light; "the photographic film was overexposed and there is no image