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An extreme close-up from the 1901 short film The Big Swallow. There are various degrees of close-up depending on how tight (zoomed in) the shot is. The terminology varies between countries and even different companies, but in general, these are: Medium Close Up ("MCU" on camera scripts): Halfway between a mid shot and a close-up. Usually covers ...
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By the mid-1920s, O'Keeffe began making large-scale paintings of natural forms at close range, as if seen through a magnifying lens. [5] O'Keeffe learned modernist photography techniques, like close-cropping, from Paul Strand and others. [2] Strand was particularly influential in her development of cropped, close-up images.
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The Manual of Close-Up Photography. Garden City, NY: Amphoto. ISBN 0-8174-2456-3. OCLC 4883084. Merklinger, Harold M. (1992). The INs and OUTs of FOCUS: An Alternative Way to Estimate Depth-of-Field and Sharpness in the Photographic Image (v. 1.0.3 ed.). Bedford, Nova Scotia: Seaboard Printing Limited. ISBN 0-9695025-0-8. OCLC 23651332.
Big changes like moving, rehoming, the addition of a new baby or pet to the household, and even kids going back to school can throw your dog’s mindstate out of whack.
A "close two shot" is a close-up with two people's heads in the frame, shot with a long lens. This framing is often used for shots of two people kissing or in moments of great dramatic tension. In classic movies, long takes were often used in which several types of shots were used without cutting.