¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Solarizes
1. solarize [v] - See also: solarize
Lexicographical Neighbors of Solarizes
Literary usage of Solarizes
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Scientific Memoirs, Being Experimental Contributions to a Knowledge of by John William Draper (1878)
"... for if the camera operation be carried on until the proof almost solarizes,
no traces can be seen in the portrait of its edges and boundaries; ..."
2. The Camera and the Pencil by Marcus Aurelius Root (1864)
"... that it may partially cover the shirt-bosom, since the whiteness of this bosom,
when exposed to intense light, not only solarizes, but impairs ..."
3. A manual of photographic chemistry, including the practice of the collodion by Thomas Frederick Hardwich (1861)
"... often gives grey solarization when kept until much Iodine is eliminated ; and
a Nitrate Bath which solarizes red from the presence of organic matter, ..."
4. The American Amateur Photographer (1900)
"It requires less platinum, it offers a wider range from softness to brilliancy,
the print solarizes less readily and is more visible, and therefore more ..."
5. Photography: A Treatise on the Chemical Changes Produced by Solar Radiation by Robert Hunt (1852)
"... for if the camera operation be carried on until the proof almost solarizes,
no traces can be seen in the portrait of its edges and boundaries; ..."
6. Photography by Robert Hunt, Francis Peabody (1853)
"... when coloured glass is employed, to make use of a large surface ; for if the
camera operation be carried on until the proof almost solarizes, no traces ..."
7. Modern Dry Plates: Or, Emulsion Photography by Josef Maria Eder (1881)
"Bromide of silver gelatine solarizes quicker than bromo-iodide, a matter of
importance in land- swipe work. There is no doubt that under ordinary ..."
8. The Chemical Effect of the Spectrum by Josef Maria Eder (1884)
"... the fact that silver iodide solarizes more easily than does the bromide.
Abney had previously found and published,* that by exposing an ordinary ..."