| CONTRAST | Difference in brightness between adjacent parts of an image, as in a photograph or a television picture (8) |
| BOKEH | In photography, the visual quality of out-offocus parts of an image rendered by a particular lens (5) |
| PHANTASMAGORIA | Fantastic sequence of images, as in a dream (14) |
| EGO | Self-esteem or self-image, as in the varieties of crocus and iris (3) |
| WALLOONS | French-speaking people living chiefly in southern and eastern Belgium and adjacent parts of France (8) |
| EVANESCE | Adjacent parts of steeple vane scenically fade (8) |
| RASTER | Dots that form an image (as on cathode-ray tube) |
| TRACINGPAPER | Sheet placed atop an image, as for copying |
| MONTAGE | French word for a pictorial technique used in art or advertising in which pre-existing images are cut out and reassembled to create a single collage-like paste-up or composite photograph; or, a style |
| MOUNT | A microscope slide; a postage-stamp hinge; a backing for a gem/photograph; or, a horse suitable for riding (5) |
| DEVELOPED | Finished an old photograph or a subdivision? (9) |
| STUMMEL | The bowl and adjacent part of a pipe (7) |
| FLICKER | A quiver of a flame, light or a television image; a tiny movement of an eye; any brief moment; or, a flash of an emotion, such as hope (7) |
| SIDE | Long edge, position or surface to the left or right of an area, object or person, as opposed to its top or bottom; a page; a slope of a hill; a team; or, a television channel (4) |
| BOX | A topiary shrub/tree; a receptacle of wood or cardboard; a bout of fisticuffs; or, a television set (3) |
| IMAGE | An idol, simile, statue or other likeness; a mental picture or idea; a photograph; or, one's persona (5) |
| DENSITY | Word for the compactness of a substance, such as bone; mass per unit volume; the opacity of a photograph; or, obtuseness/stupidity (7) |
| SYNAPSE | In the nervous system, a gap between adjacent neurons, or between a neuron and an effector cell, across which electrical impulses are transmitted (7) |
| CLOSEUP | A photograph or film or TV shot taken in near proximity (5-2) |
| MATTE | In film and television, a mask used to blank out part of an image so that another can be superimposed (5) |