| texture |
Both the tactile surface of an artwork itself (real texture) and the visual illusion of tactile surfaces within an artwork (illusionistic texture).
Ãâó: www.artsmia.org/art_in_america/glossary.html
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| texture |
the the intermixing of sounds, for example in musical harmony, where several voices blend together, or in a film soundtrack where cars, guns and street noise combine to provide a physical sense of the location
Ãâó: www.waikato.ac.nz/film/handbook/glossary.html
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| texture |
Surface sheen or finish of the petals (eg: velvety, satiny)
Ãâó: www.schreinersgardens.com/iris_culture.shtml
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| texture |
In a photographic image the frequency of change and arrangement of tones.
Ãâó: www.gaf.de/presshelp/glossary/p81.htm
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| texture |
a term describing the surface effect of a fabric, such as dull, lustrous, wooly, stiff, soft, fine, coarse, open, or closely woven; the structural quality of a fabric.
Ãâó: www.victor-perrin.fr/e/glossary/glossary_textil_t....
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