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Discover LudwigThe phrase "close-up image" is a correct and valid phrase in written English.
You can use it to refer to a photograph or an image taken from a close vantage point, often from a few inches away from the subject of the image. For example, "The close-up image captured the tiny details of the butterfly's wings".
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A little context from Nasa on that close-up image of Pluto's surface.
In another close-up image Delevingne is pictured with her hair scraped back with foundation dripping down her face.
Late Friday, Mr. Rajab's son Adam posted a close-up image of bruising on his father's face on Twitter.
Each spread features a full-bleed and disconcertingly close-up image of a snake (or, in a few cases, snakes) in astonishing poses and situations.
Take the current issue of Zoo on sale at Tesco: a close-up image of a woman's breasts and the headline: "THE SUMMER BOOBS ISSUE".
The invite features a close-up image of the top of the Apple logo and the tag line "wish we could say more".
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When the close-up images arrived, they covered everything on the checklist.
Can you name these close-up images of other branded foods without their packaging?
Close-up images revealed that her feet were dragging as she was hoisted into the vehicle.
Cassini will also take stunning close-up images of the rings.
The latest close-up images show slanting expanses of sedimentary deposits, lying one above the other.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com