San Serif:
Means “Without Feet”. Sans Serif is the font or type face that lacks the strokes on the end of letters. Arial, Verdana are examples of San Serif type faces.
Saturation:
Intensity of color. It refers to the degree of difference from gray. High saturation will appear to be bright and low saturation will appear dull.
Search Engine:
A program used for searching documents (Web pages) from the internet. Particular set of keywords or keyword phrases are used and the program returns with search results found for those specific key words.
Serif:
Meaning "little feet." Common serif typefaces include Times Roman, Garamond, and Palatino.
Solarization:
Over exposure that results in reversal of a photographic image.
Spot Color:
Refers to the use of solid color. A term used in printing when each color is printed with its own ink and not going through the process of using CMYK colors.
Style sheet:
A page layout that is used in creating a document for word processing, web or desk top publishing. It is a file used for storing margins, tabs, fonts, headers, footers and other layout settings for a particular category of document. |