Struggling with a digital photography word or phrase? You're
not alone. Photography has its own language, and digital
photography adds many new terms. This glossary defines commonly
used words and phrases in digital photography.
Ambient light – The
natural light in a scene.
Archival – The ability
of a material, including some printing papers and compact
discs, to last for many years.
Aperture – A small,
circular opening inside the lens that can change in diameter
to control the amount of light reaching the camera's sensor
as a picture is taken. The aperture diameter is expressed
in f-stops; the lower the number, the larger the aperture.
For instance, the aperture opening when set to f/2.8 is
larger than at f/8. The aperture and shutter speed together
control the total amount of light reaching the sensor. A
larger aperture passes more light through to the sensor.
Many cameras have an aperture priority mode that allows
you to adjust the aperture to your own liking. See also
shutter speed.
Application – A computer
program, such as an image editor or image browser.
Buffer – Memory in
the camera that stores digital photos before they are written
to the memory card.
Burning – Selectively
darkening part of a photo with an image editing program.
CCD – Charge Coupled
Device: one of the two main types of image sensors used
in digital cameras. When a picture is taken, the CCD is
struck by light coming through the camera's lens. Each of
the thousands or millions of tiny pixels that make up the
CCD convert this light into electrons. The number of electrons,
usually described as the pixel's accumulated charge, is
measured, then converted to a digital value. This last step
occurs outside the CCD, in a camera component called an
analog-to-digital converter.
CD-R – CD-Recordable:
a compact disc that holds either 650 or 700 MB of digital
information, including digital photos. Creating one is commonly
referred to as burning a CD. A CD-R disc can only
be written to once, and is an ideal storage medium for original
digital photos.
CD-RW – CD-Rewritable:
similar in virtually all respects to a CD-R, except that
a CD-RW disc can be written and erased many times. This
makes them best suited to many backup tasks, but not for
long term storage of original digital photos.
CMOS – Complementary
Metal-Oxide Semiconductor: one of the two main types of
image sensors used in digital cameras. Its basic function
is the same as that of a CCD. CMOS sensors are currently
found in only a handful of digital cameras.
CMYK – Cyan, Magenta,
Yellow, Black. The four colors in the inksets of many photo-quality
printers. Some printers use six ink colors to achieve smoother,
more photographic prints. The two additional colors are
often lighter shades of cyan and magenta.
CompactFlash™ – A
common type of digital camera memory card, about the size
of a matchbook. There are two types of cards, Type I and
Type II. They vary only in their thickness, with Type I
being slightly thinner. A CompactFlash memory card can contain
either flash memory or a miniature hard drive. The flash
memory type is more prevalent.
Contrast – The difference
between the darkest and lightest areas in a photo. The greater
the difference, the higher the contrast.
Digital camera – A
camera that captures the photo not on film, but in an electronic
imaging sensor that takes the place of film.
Dodging – Selectively
lightening part of a photo with an image editing program.
Download, downloading
– The process of moving computer data from one location
to another. Though the term is normally used to describe
the transfer, or downloading, of data from the Internet,
it is also used to describe the transfer of photos from
a camera memory card to the computer. Example: I downloaded
photos to my PC.
DPI – Dots per inch:
A measurement of the resolution of a digital photo or digital
device, including digital cameras and printers. The higher
the number, the greater the resolution.
EXIF – Exchangeable
Image File: the file format used by most digital cameras.
For example, when a typical camera is set to record a JPEG,
it's actually recording an EXIF file that uses JPEG compression
to compress the photo data within the file.
External flash – A
supplementary flash unit that connects to the camera with
a cable, or is triggered by the light from the camera's
internal flash. Many fun and creative effects can be created
with external flash.
File – A computer
document.
Fill flash – A flash
technique used to brighten deep shadow areas, typically
outdoors on sunny days. Some digital cameras include a fill
flash mode that forces the flash to fire, even in bright
light.
Fire – Slang for shooting
a picture. Example: I pressed the shutter button to fire.
FireWire – A type
of cabling technology for transferring data to and from
digital devices at high speed. Some professional digital
cameras and memory card readers connect to the computer
over FireWire. FireWire card readers are typically faster
than those that connect via USB. Also known as IEEE 1394,
FireWire was invented by Apple Computer but is now commonly
used with Windows-based PCs as well.
Grayscale – A photo
made up of varying tones of black and white. Grayscale is
synonymous with black and white.
Highlights – The brightest
parts of a photo.
Histogram – A graphic
representation of the range of tones from dark to light
in a photo. Some digital cameras include a histogram feature
that enables a precise check on the exposure of the photo.
Image browser – An
application that enables you to view digital photos. Some
browsers also allow you to rename files, convert photos
from one file format to another, add text descriptions,
and more.
Image editor – A computer
program that enables you to adjust a photo to improve its
appearance. With image editing software, you can darken
or lighten a photo, rotate it, adjust its contrast, crop
out extraneous detail, remove red-eye and more.
Image resolution -
The number of pixels in a digital photo is commonly referred
to as its image resolution.
Inkjet – A printer
that places ink on the paper by spraying droplets through
tiny nozzles.
ISO speed – A rating
of a film's sensitivity to light. Though digital cameras
don't use film, they have adopted the same rating system
for describing the sensitivity of the camera's imaging sensor.
Digital cameras often include a control for adjusting the
ISO speed; some will adjust it automatically depending on
the lighting conditions, adjusting it upwards as the available
light dims. Generally, as ISO speed climbs, image quality
drops.
JPEG – A standard
for compressing image data developed by the Joint Photographic
Experts Group, hence the name JPEG. Strictly speaking, JPEG
is not a file format, it's a compression method that is
used within a file format, such as the EXIF-JPEG format
common to digital cameras. It is referred to as a lossy
format, which means some quality is lost in achieving JPEG's
high compression rates. Usually, if a high-quality, low-compression
JPEG setting is chosen on a digital camera, the loss of
quality is not detectable to the eye.
LCD – Liquid Crystal
Display: a low-power monitor often used on the top and/or
rear of a digital camera to display settings or the photo
itself.
Media – Material that
information is written to and stored on. Digital photography
storage media includes CompactFlash cards and CDs.
Megabyte (MB) – A
measurement of data storage equal to 1024 kilobytes (KB).
Megapixel – Equal
to one million pixels.
Memory Stick®—A memory
card slightly smaller than a single stick of chewing gum.
Like CompactFlash and SmartMedia, it is flash-based storage
for your photos.
NiMH – Nickel Metal-Hydride:
a type of rechargeable battery that can be recharged many
times. NiMH batteries provide sufficient power to run digital
cameras and flashes.
Online photo printer
– A company that receives digital photos uploaded to its
Web site, prints them, then sends the prints back by mail
or courier.
Panning – A photography
technique in which the camera follows a moving subject.
Done correctly, the subject is sharp and clear, while the
background is blurred, giving a sense of motion to the photo.
Pixel – Picture Element:
digital photographs are comprised of thousands or millions
of them; they are the building blocks of a digital photo.
RAW – The RAW image
format is the data as it comes directly off the CCD, with
no in-camera processing is performed.
Red-eye – The red
glow from a subject's eyes caused by light from a flash
reflecting off the blood vessels behind the retina in the
eye. The effect is most common when light levels are low,
outdoor at night, or indoor in a dimly-lit room.
RGB – Red, Green,
Blue: the three colors to which the human visual system,
digital cameras and many other devices are sensitive.
Saturation – How rich
the colors are in a photo.
Sensitivity – See
ISO speed.
Serial – A method
for connecting an external device such as a printer, scanner,
or camera, to a computer. It has been all but replaced by
USB and FireWire in modern computers.
Sharpness – The clarity
of detail in a photo.
Shutter speed – The
camera's shutter speed is a measurement of how long its
shutter remains open as the picture is taken. The slower
the shutter speed, the longer the exposure time. When the
shutter speed is set to 1/125 or simply 125, this means
that the shutter will be open for exactly 1/125th of one
second. The shutter speed and aperture together control
the total amount of light reaching the sensor. Some digital
cameras have a shutter priority mode that allows you to
set the shutter speed to your liking. See also aperture.
SmartMedia™—a wafer-thin,
matchbook size memory card. This is also a flash-memory
based storage medium.
Thumbnail – A small
version of a photo. Image browsers commonly display thumbnails
of photos several or even dozens at a time. In Windows XP's
My Pictures, you can view thumbnails of photos in both the
Thumbnails and Filmstrip view modes.
USB – Universal Serial
Bus: a protocol for transferring data to and from digital
devices. Many digital cameras and memory card readers connect
to the USB port on a computer. USB card readers are typically
faster than cameras or readers that connect to the serial
port, but slower than those that connect via FireWire.
White balance – A
function on the camera to compensate for different colors
of light being emitted by different light sources.