6.5 Key Chapter Terms

Chapter 6 Terms

Aspect ratio:
The proportional relationship between the width of a video image compared to its height (Homes, 2023, para. 1).
Assets:
Media files to be used in a video.
Cutaway:
An editing term for a cut that interrupts the flow of a sequence with another shot that is related to it.
Dissolve:
An editing term for a transition where the end of one shot overlaps with the beginning of the next, creating a gradual fade.
Exposure:
How bright or dark footage is.
Fade:
An editing term for a transition where there is a gradual brightening or gradual change into a color at either the beginning or ending of a shot.
Framing:
Manipulation of a shot in order to convey a vision to the audience.
Interlace:
A technique television uses to display its image where odd numbers of a row get sent first, and then even numbers.
Opacity:
How transparent an image is.
Resolution:
The number of pixels contained in each frame (Leonard & Kurniawan, n.d., para. 1)
Screen casting:
A video format where the filmmaker records their computer screen and narrates over it.
Split edit:
An editing term for when the visual and audio of a scene cut at different times during the transition from one shot to another.
Timeline:
Where parts of a video are complied and arranged.
Tracks:
Layers in the timeline where media can be placed.
Transitions:
A visual effect that joins together two clips.

Attribution & References

Except where otherwise noted, Terms and definitions are adapted from the pages and original sources cited within chapter 6, CC BY-NC 4.0.

References for terms from outside sources

Holmes, T. (2023, January 4). What is Aspect Ratio? https://wistia.com/learn/production/what-is-aspect-ratio

Leonard, M., & Kurniawan, M. (n.d). A beginner’s guide to video resolution. https://www.adobe.com/ca/creativecloud/video/discover/video-resolution.html
Transitions

License

Icon for the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License

DRAFT - Multimedia Communications Copyright © by Marie Rutherford is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

Share This Book