Advertisement
Advertisement
double exposure
noun
the act of exposing the same film, frame, plate, etc., twice.
the picture resulting from such exposure.
double exposure
noun
the act or process of recording two superimposed images on a photographic medium, usually done intentionally to produce a special effect
the photograph resulting from such an act
Word History and Origins
Origin of double exposure1
Example Sentences
"For Europe it's double exposure: exposure to what America might do and then what China will do in response."
Along with Bach’s skillful performance, Manthei’s poise and onstage presence suggests a double exposure of Anne as an old woman and a child.
In one, from 1979, titled “James Baldwin in Setting Sun Over Harlem,” Smith, using double exposure, overlays very faintly a photo she took of Baldwin onto a skyscape of light-shot dark clouds.
The broadcast team ran with it, using the same effect employed by Tarantino in the “Kill Bill” films whenever their protagonist’s thirst for vengeance is triggered: a red tint, a sound known as the “Ironside Siren,” and a double exposure of her face and a memory of the traumatic event.
The double exposure trend is one that has made its way around the world several times by now, but in New York, it remains a piece of the Black and immigrant aesthetic.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse