Creating Low-Code Loan Applications using the Trisotech Mortgage Feature Set
Media presentation 1
1. O-shoulder:
A shot taken over the shoulder in order to show what the
character can see. This is a shot of someone or something
taken from the perspective or camera angle from the
shoulder of another person.
Three shot:
A cinema shot of three people. This shot is usually of
when the three people are conversing amongst on
another.
Two-shot:
A cinema or television shot of two people together. A Two shot is a type of shot employed
in the film industry in which the frame encompasses a view of two people (the subjects).
The subjects do not have to be next to each other, and there are many common two-shots
which have one subject in the foreground and the other subject in the background. It is
very useful if the film is about two people.
2. Long shot/Wide shot:
Subject or characters are at some distance from the
camera; they are seen in full within their surrounding
environment.
Medium Long shot:
Halfway between a long and a medium shot. If this shot frames a
character then the whole body will be in view towards the middle
ground of the shot. A quite open shot in terms of readability, showing
considerably more of the surroundings in relation to the character
Medium shot:
Is placed in order to show the persons lower torso to the top of the
head. Plus showing a bit of background. this shot frames a character
from the waist, hips or knees up (or down). The camera is sufficiently
distanced from the body for the character to be seen in relation to her
or his surroundings
3. Medium Close up:
Close-up of one or two (sometimes three) characters, generally
framing the shoulders or chest and the head. The term can also be
used when the camera frames the character(s) from the waist up (or
down), provided the character is right to the forefront and fills the
frame
Close up:
This is a close up of The Joker from Batman. Close ups are used in order to show
the character but also a small part of the background. A close-up in filmmaking,
television production, still photography and the comic strip medium is a type of
shot, which tightly frames a person or an object. Close-ups are one of the
standard shots used regularly.
Extreme Close up:
This is an Extreme close up of a human eye which is used in cinematography to show emotion. An
Extreme close up could be of anything it doesn't necessarily have to be of an eye it could be of
anything that is being used to illustrate meaning. For example a certain feature, such as someone's
head, takes up the whole frame. Extreme Close Up ;The shot is so tight that only a detail of the
subject, such as someone's eyes, can be seen.