-
anything that is lit will be seen on both
sides of a
scrim:
scrims do not
absorb light.
Scrim can also be used in
theatre in
combination with a cyclorama...
- Look up
scrim in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Scrim can
refer to:
Scrim (material),
either of two
types of
material (a lightweight,
translucent fabric...
-
change in
colour temperature,
becoming more orange, as they are dimmed.
Scrims in this
context are
considered to be a “colour safe”
alternative to electrically...
-
Scrim and
sarking is a
method of
interior construction widely used in
Australia and New
Zealand in the late 19th and
early 20th centuries. In this method...
-
behind the
curtain is lit.
Scrims can be
painted and used as both a
backdrop and a
scrim in some situations. Some
scrims can also be used for projections...
-
SCRIM (Sideway-force
Coefficient Routine Investigation Machine) is a machine,
originally developed by TRL
Limited in the
United Kingdom, used to measure...
-
school quiz bowl game show
televised in Pennsylvania, US
Scrum (rugby)
Scrim (disambiguation) This
disambiguation page
lists articles ****ociated with...
- canvas, and
scrims covering the
building alongside blue
construction walls) and in August-September 2022 with scaffolding, blue canvas, and
scrims covering...
-
animal hair (horse, hog and cow), coir,
straw and hay, hessians,
linen scrims, wadding, etc., and is done by hand,
building each
layer up. In contrast...
-
unbleached canvas (larger versions) or
muslin (smaller versions),
filled scrim (po****rized on
Broadway in the 20th century), or
seamless translucent plastic...