Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
Several were by his wife, including a photogram of glass beads.
A photogram is a photograph that is made without a camera.
A circular photogram in sharp black and white appeared on the screen.
The first photogram was probably made around 1802.
It is akin to creating a photogram, using chemically treated paper.
"See that picture..." He meant the big photogram of the tropical beach.
In the resulting photogram the outlines of the "real" objects remain clear, allowing the printed image to show through.
A simple photogram - derived from metal rings and circles - is imposed on each sheet.
Many, though, have a mysterious beauty, with the photogram and reproduced painting seeming to blend together.
The third image is a red photogram of the snake and its gorgeous trail of ripples.
'Kirlian photography' refers to a form of photogram made with a high voltage.
By using this photogram process, Anna Atkins is regarded as the first female photographer.
The christening dress and a rabbit motif are carryovers from two earlier photogram series.
Only occasionally, though, does this side of the work come to the fore, when captions or other text on the posters appear through the photogram.
"It's a very fine photogram," said the Palmerian Professor.
Her chosen medium is the photogram.
A little later, he tried out recognizable objects as well, like the distorted profile of himself, almost a caricature, in a photogram of 1926.
For the last decade, Mr. Fuss has concentrated on possibilities involving the photogram.
Seldom, though, does a photographer create work with a camera and lens that appears to be an astonishing cross between a photograph and a photogram.
"That photogram was taken with a standard silver nitrate emulsion," Lord Asriel said.
In his works he utilized and combined the techniques of photogram, photomontage, collage and drawing.
Yet he did not consider himself a photographer, never taught photography at the Bauhaus and in the 1930's gave up camera work, though not the photogram.
Moholy-Nagy produced photogram and luminogram images from 1922 in Berlin continuously until his death in 1946.
He also created a type of photogram he called "rayographs", which he described as "pure dadaism".
In Color Cry, he employed the "photogram" method combined with various stencils and fabrics to create abstract patterns.