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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
halftone
noun
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Base artwork artwork requiring additional components such as halftones or line drawings to be added before the reproduction stage.
▪ Frequently used in discussions about scanners as a measure of their ability to capture halftone images.
▪ Linen tester a magnifying glass designed for checking the dot image of a halftone.
▪ The scanner manufacturers use lots of clever software to simulate halftones by a process called dithering.
▪ There were also problems with halftone screens but anyone expecting decent halftones at 300 or even 600dpi is on a loser anyway.
▪ Third, avoid bitmapped graphics generally and scanned halftones in particular.
▪ This driver has a host of other very useful features, including things like resolution control and halftone angles.
Wiktionary
halftone

n. 1 (context music English) half the interval between two notes on a scale. 2 (context printing English) A picture made by using the process of half-toning. 3 (cx arts English) An intermediate or middle tone in a painting, engraving, photograph, etc.; a middle tint, neither very dark nor very light. vb. To reproduce a photograph or other continuous tone image by the use of dots of various sizes.

WordNet
halftone
  1. n. a print obtained from photoengraving

  2. an engraving used to reproduce an illustration [syn: halftone engraving, photoengraving]

Wikipedia
Halftone

Halftone is the reprographic technique that simulates continuous tone imagery through the use of dots, varying either in size or in spacing, thus generating a gradient-like effect. "Halftone" can also be used to refer specifically to the image that is produced by this process.

Where continuous tone imagery contains an infinite range of colors or greys, the halftone process reduces visual reproductions to an image that is printed with only one color of ink, in dots of differing size ( amplitude modulation) or spacing ( frequency modulation). This reproduction relies on a basic optical illusion: the tiny halftone dots are blended into smooth tones by the human eye. At a microscopic level, developed black-and-white photographic film also consists of only two colors, and not an infinite range of continuous tones. For details, see film grain.

Just as color photography evolved with the addition of filters and film layers, color printing is made possible by repeating the halftone process for each subtractive color—most commonly using what is called the " CMYK color model". The semi-opaque property of ink allows halftone dots of different colors to create another optical effect—full-color imagery.

Usage examples of "halftone".

The faint glow from his nearly extinguished fire pot cast the room into halftones of rose and black.

The picture recorded in the receptor was a nuclear portrait in cross section, where sextillions of atoms performed the role of the dots in an ordinary halftone photoengraving.