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Discover LudwigThe phrase "reproduced image" is correct and can be used in written English.
It refers to an image that has been copied or replicated in some way, often through printing or digital technology. Example: The museum proudly displayed a reproduced image of the famous painting, giving visitors the opportunity to see the intricate details up close.
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It is credited with being the most frequently reproduced image in the world.
Photo-realist painters created highly illusionistic images that referred not to nature but to the reproduced image.
The color, described as blue in the article, is blue-green in the original photo, not the light green suggested by the reproduced image.
While experts doubt the report today, the much reproduced image, "The Unknown Woman of the Seine," became a popular icon and inspired Louis Aragon's novel "Aurélien".
The picture you selected of the small boy was a moving but much reproduced image and could not convey the unique authority of Karski's own visage.
The Daily News decided to show the most widely reproduced image — Foley, dressed in orange, on his knees; his executor, in black, standing behind him.
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It became one of the most widely reproduced images of that year's Biennale.
One of Berenice Abbott's most frequently reproduced images is her 1938 aerial view "Wall Street District".
In both laboriously copying and altering already reproduced images he pointed up how conceptually malleable objects are.
Creased prints, poorly reproduced images, frayed publicity materials — not what one expects when one enters a fine-art gallery.
By Whitney Johnson December 9, 2011 Creased prints, poorly reproduced images, frayed publicity materials — not what one expects when one enters a fine-art gallery.
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