About us

shad·ow / shadō/

1. a dark area or shape produced by a body coming between rays of light and a surface: trees cast long shadows.

2. Area screened from a light source and therefore relatively dark. It differs in size depending on the distance between the light source and the screening object. When the light source is extended, the outline of the shadow is blurred; where the source is partly visible, there is an area of mid-shadow (penumbra) lying outside the darker shadow itself (umbra).

3.diffraction bending of waves around the edge of an obstacle. When light strikes an opaque body, for instance, a shadow forms on the side of the body that is shielded from the light source. Ordinarily light travels in straight lines through a uniform, transparent medium, but those light waves that just pass the edges of the opaque body are bent, or deflected.

shad·ow / shadō/ screen / skrēn/

ShadowScreen
The use of shadow, light, and creativity to produce breathtaking images to be beamed onto television screens, computer screens, and the silver screen. At the helm, Director/Writer-Ryan Travis and Executive Producer/Line Producer –Ari Weiner create groundbreaking content that pushes the envelope while maintaining amazing production values and drawing upon a unique and one of a kind talent.

screen / skrēn/

1. the surface of a cathode-ray tube or similar electronic device, esp. that of a television, VDT, or monitor, on which images and data are displayed. a blank, typically white or silver surface on which a photographic image is projected: the world's largest movie screen. (the screen) movies or television; the motion-picture industry: she's a star of the stage as well as the screen. the data or images displayed on a computer screen: pressing the F1 key at any time will display a help screen. Photog. a flat piece of ground glass on which the image formed by a camera lens is focused.

2. show (a movie or video) or broadcast (a television program): the show is to be screened by HBO later this year.

DERIVATIVES:

screen·a·ble adj.
screen·er n.
screen·ful / -ˌfoŏl/ n.
ORIGIN: Middle English: shortening of Old Northern French escren, of Germanic origin.