montage

listen to the pronunciation of montage
English - Turkish
montaj
kurgu
{f} montajla
montaj,v.montajla: n.kurgu
{i} fotomontaj
(isim) montaj
{i} sin., TV montaj
(Sinema) film montajı
(Fotoğrafçılık) bindirme
montage sequence
montaj sırası
English - English
To combine or depict into a montage
An analogous literary, musical or other heterogenous artistic composite
An art form consisting of putting together or assembling various smaller pictures to create a larger work
the term applied to the testing variables and their order on polysomnogram paper or a computer monitor, such EEG, EOG, heart rate, and so on
An art form consisting of putting together or assembling various smaller pieces to create a larger work
In artwork, several photographs pasted on one artboard in a pleasing manner They can be placed on angles, overlapped, cut to various shapes, etc
A montage is a picture, film, or piece of music which consists of several different items that are put together, often in an unusual combination or sequence. a photo montage of some of Italy's top television stars. (French; "mounting") Pictorial technique in which cut-out illustrations, or fragments of them, are arranged together and mounted on a support, producing a composite picture made from several different pictures. It differs from collage in using only ready-made images chosen for their subject or message. The technique is widely used in advertising. Photomontage uses photographs only. In motion pictures, montage is the sequential assembling of separate pieces of thematically related film by the director, film editor, and visual and sound technicians, who cut and fit each part with the others to produce visual juxtapositions and complex audio patterns
(1) In the cinema, the art of conveying an idea and/or mood by the rapid juxtaposition of different images and camera angles (2) In art, the kind of work made from pictures or parts of pictures already produced and now forming a new composition Compare assemblage, collage
The process of making a composite picture by bringing together into a single composition a number of different pictures or parts of pictures and arranging these to form a blended whole
a paste-up made by sticking together pieces of paper or photographs to form an artistic image; "he used his computer to make a collage of pictures superimposed on a map"
Single image made up of several photographs
Single image created from a compilation of several images
A picture formed by applying separate images or photographs in parts or layers to form a total image
An illustrated piece of art that depicts the 11 EERE programs, either through illustrations or words, as well as key EERE themes and initiatives
(1) Technique of combining in a single photographic composition elements from various sources, such as parts of different photographs (2) A photographic image produced by this technique
In artwork, several photographs ("C" prints) or several transparencies (all the same reproduction size) are pasted or taped to an art board or acetate in order to create a pleasing layout which is capable of being separated in one piece Originals should contain similar highlight, middletone and shadow characteristics
literally the French term for editing, but specifically used to describe a style of Russian film editing of the 1920s
a transitional filming technique in which a series of images appear on the screen producing the effect of the passage of time
{i} technique of creating a composite picture; juxtaposition of separate parts to create a whole (picture, film, music, etc.)
Several photographs or images arranged together to form one complete piece of art
Pictures mounted together to produce a further picture
a collection of pictures put together in one picture generally around a particular theme
a way to package 2D images or 2D slices from a 3D image into a large 2D matrix mainly for display purposes
a single image formed from the assembling of several images
1 A synonym for editing 2 An approach to editing developed by the Soviet filmmakers of the 1920s; it emphasizes dynamic, often discontinuous, relationships between shots and the juxtaposition of images to create ideas not present in either shot by itself See also discontinuity editing, intellectual montage
The editing together of a large number of shots with no intention to create a continuous reality A montage is often used to compress time (a number of facts are established in one sequence) A production may begin with a montage to establish a particular time and place With the absence of a visual relationship between them, the montage shots are linked together through a unifying sound - either a voice over or music
the stored representation of a saved Montage Desktop, including the states of all the objects it contains (Note the use of lower case, to distinguish Montage metafiles from Montage, the program ) Unlike the Windows Registry, there may be any number of montages, each corresponding to an alternate view
(1) A synonym for editing (2) An approach to editing developed by the Soviet filmmakers of the 1920s Soviet Montage emphasizes dynamic, often discontinuous, relationships between shots It also emphasizes intellectual montage
(Collage): Artwork that is comprised of portions of various existing images from photographs or prints These forms are arranged so that they join, overlap, or blend to create a new image
a single picture composition created by superimposing or arranging many portions of images in a way that makes them join or blend into one
Television sequence that incorporates formal features to imply changes in space, time, action, mental state, or character point of view (Anderson & Field, 1983, p 76)
A combination of related pictures, parts of pictures and/or pieces of copy appearing as one See also: Collage to top
montage sequence
A montage sequence is a technique in film editing in which a series of short shots is edited into a sequence to condense narrative. It is usually used to advance the story as a whole (often to suggest the passage of time), rather than to create symbolic meaning as it does in Soviet montage theory. In many cases, a song plays in the background to enhance the mood or reinforce the message being conveyed
training montage
See: montage sequence
montage

    Hyphenation

    mon·tage

    Turkish pronunciation

    mäntäj

    Pronunciation

    /mänˈtäᴢʜ/ /mɑːnˈtɑːʒ/

    Etymology

    [ män-'täzh, mOn ] (noun.) 1929. From French montage, from the verb monter (“put up”)
Favorites