A black and white image printed with three screens and three colors, such as one black and two grays, used to enrich the contrast between light and dark areas. see also continuous tone, duotone, halftone, quadratone, screen.
A dissonant interval consisting of three whole steps, known in medieval music as "the devil in music."
An image produced by taking a black-and-white picture and printing it on top of itself in three different colors of ink to produce a subtle range of tone. The principle is the same as for a DUOTONE.
an interval half way up to the octave
an interval of an augmented fourth or diminished fifth
an interval of three whole steps
an interval of three whole tones
a symmetrical interval, it is precisely in the middle of the chromatic scale
the interval of three whole steps, i.e. an augmented 4th or diminished 5th.
the interval of an augmented fourth or diminished fifth. The most dissonant of all interval. Referred to by Medieval and Renaissance musicians as the "devil in music"
A black-and-white image printed with three screens and three colors, such as a black and two greys, to heighten contrast between light and dark areas.
An image reproduced using three colors. to top
A printed image created with three different colors of ink.
The tritone (tri- or three and tone) is a musical interval that spans three whole tones. The tritone is the same as an augmented fourth, which in equal temperament is enharmonic to a diminished fifth.