-->

Archive for the ‘Personal Photos’ Category

Aunt and Nieces Portrait

Thursday, February 18th, 2010
Aunt, original This is an aunt and nieces portrait from one of my favorite eras – I love the clothes from this time and covet this gorgeous ladies shoes!

The original photo had a lot of surface cracks and an “oily” surface stain that needed to be removed. As usual, I wanted to remove the degradation without losing the detail of the photograph underneath. I’ve noticed this is a problem with restorations I see online – they often blur the area to remove the cracks or stain but then everything is altered. I prefer to take a very high resolution scan and go in with a graphics tablet and pen and literally erase the cracks by hand without using any filters, so that doesn’t happen anywhere but in background sections. This is a close up of the largest cracked area I needed to repair:

Aunt, closeup

The final restored portrait was a success – my client “absolutely loved them” – and it will be displayed side by side with the other portrait of her grandmother, the Girl with Hat that I restored.

Aunt, restored
  • Share/Bookmark

Girl with Hat

Thursday, February 18th, 2010
Hat girl, original This beautiful photo of my customers grandmother melted my heart the moment I saw it.  And what a great hat she is wearing!

The original photo had beautiful graininess and composition but the surface had degraded over the decades, with areas that had faded or cracked. The customer sent me a very high resolution scan so that I could retain all of that beautiful texture and remove the aging without losing the fine details.

Here is the final photo, restored. Originally, this was probably a black and white photo and I initially desaturated it to black and white to work on it, but then returned a sepia tone to make it look antiqued. That was done simultaneously with the Aunt photo, which it would accompany.

Hat girl, restored

  • Share/Bookmark

Remove People from Background

Tuesday, December 15th, 2009

fred-before This project is to be a gift from my customer to her husband for Christmas. She borrowed this photo of his dad, who passed away about 10 years ago, from her sister-in-law, and asked me to remove the background people and make him the focal point of the photo. The original was a bit faded and grainy in focus but by scanning it at a very high resolution, it was possible to do what was necessary.

fred-after I used elements from the background to fill in the places where I removed people, and extended building, ground and grass elements. Then I separated him from the background and blurred the background a bit to make it more out of focus, eliminating any signs that changes had taken place. I enlarged and color-adjusted him along the way.

Her response when I sent the final photo? Magic!

  • Share/Bookmark

Water Damaged Tinted Photo

Sunday, December 13th, 2009

I’ve shown you how I can tint photos using Photoshop to give them color – but finally, I got to see in person what a tinted photo done the old school way looks like up close.
mich-mom-sis-orig
This photo was originally black and white, and someone had carefully hand painted every bit of it with colored dyes, to make it look like a color photo. The problem? This 4 decade old photo had gotten some water on it and the ink had run!

mich-mom-sis-eye-closeupThe original was about 8×10. I scanned it at a very high resolution so I could see every detail, and went in with my graphics tablet and removed all of the cracks, large and small. I also removed a lot of speckling that had taken place in the dye surface. That was really the easy part and something I do regularly.

mich-mom-sis-waterReplacing the area which had been wet was a bigger challenge because the ink had all run to the color blue. I needed to repaint it based on what little I could see underneath, and pick up the dresses fabric pattern from the areas which weren’t damaged. This was obviously the most time consuming aspect of the restoration.

In the end it was worth the detailed effort – here is the photo, restored and ready to be printed again.

mich-mom-sis-fixed
  • Share/Bookmark

Restored Family Photos as Gifts

Friday, December 4th, 2009

It is not too late to consider giving a restored family photo as a holiday gift. Just today, I finished one which will be printed and framed as a gift for someone’s loved one – I hope to be able to show it here after the holiday! I can turn around most restorations in a day, and then it’s quite easy and fast to get it printed either locally or online.

Having a family photo repaired as a gift is a great, cost effective way to give something to a group of people. One of my customers recently had a photo of her parents restored and will be having a variety of sizes printed to give as a gift to at least ten different people. Think about it this way – if the restoration costs $60, and the prints are .15 cents each, you’re looking at a very economical way to give a gift.

The more important consideration is the value your gift will bring. During these tough economic times, families are pulling together and helping each out more than ever. And the importance of gifts that have meaning – versus something you put batteries in and numb out to – is becoming increasingly evident. If you happen to have a great old photo of a family member in an album somewhere, cracked and faded, now is a great time to have it restored and give it to your children and grand children. Or perhaps you know your parent has such a treasure hanging in their home – let them know it is possible to not only make it look as good as new but share with their descendants. Have more than one photo in mind? I offer a bulk discount to anyone who comes to me with more than one photo to be restored at one time.

Give me a call or send me an email – preferably with a high resolution scan of your photo attached, and I will get back to you quickly with an estimate.

  • Share/Bookmark

Family Vacation

Tuesday, December 1st, 2009
Beach Vacation, faded This family photo of a Florida vacation in the 1960s, has become deeply faded from being framed in a sunny room for decades. I was given a digital scan of the original to see if I could restore the color.

It took dozens of adjustments to get there but in the end, I was able to return much of the color to the image – which is pretty amazing when you look at the faded one and how little actual color is there. Unfortunately, this is pretty typical of photos taken with the photography technology of that era – and since photos are meant to be displayed for all to see, this is a common occurrence.

Beach Vacation, fixed

Now that it has been restored, the families of all five grown up children can get a copy to print and hang – or store safely on a CD.

  • Share/Bookmark

Collage of Mother

Tuesday, September 8th, 2009

The end goal in all of the photo restoration I completed recently was to create a 20×30″ print that could be given as a gift to the children and grandchildren of the woman in the photos, who is now in her 70s. Rather than remove every photo from the background, I chose to make three of them retain thier “frame” and the others, larger and free floating in the foreground. I think this made for a more interesting and unique composition when all was said and done. Each individual photo is still in either a 4×6, 5×7 or 8×10 size, also, for individual printing.

Mother's collage

This is a perfect example of how a photo restoration project can be both a way to recover and preserve family heritage, and a very cost effective way to give gifts to an extended group of people. Although this was a large amount of restoration overall, with the bulk discount I applied and the really low cost of actually printing individual fixed photos, the project resulted in a treasure for many people in this family. A similar photo collage approach is also ideal for photo memorials!

  • Share/Bookmark

Stains on Photograph

Sunday, August 30th, 2009
unk-couple2-orig

This very serious portrait was fading with age, and had become spotted with multiple stains.  To preserve it,  I removed all the brown stains, then adjusted the contrast and added back the sepia tone.

unk-couple2-closeup

Adjusting the photo enhanced textures that were hidden in the faded image, like the lacy texture of her dress and paint strokes in the backdrop. I removed the black object on her chest, because it was too  nondescript to be sure what it was and it just looked like a blemish.

Something like this doesn’t take long at all but what a difference it makes in the final photograph, ready for framing.

unk-couple2-fixed
  • Share/Bookmark

Severe Photo Damage

Thursday, August 20th, 2009
mother-torn-orig Every so often, I see a photo that is so badly damaged that I wonder if I can actually fix it to my own satisfaction. The trick is being able to see beyond the cracks and tears to what was there before, and have the ability to repaint the areas that are gone. Although time consuming, this is far more possible than if the photo I’m working with is badly blurred or faded to the point that no detail is there.

When I first saw this photo, I knew I had a challenge ahead of me.  It was only 4×6 inches, and torn in so many places that it was held together on the back with scotch tape, folding in my hand. There were large chunks torn off the edges, staining and yellowing, and areas of what appeared to be a dark speckled dirtiness that I’d never seen in an image before. I scanned it as is, at the highest possible resolution I could. I was going to need to work on this in great detail and every pixel would count. But I could see that underneath it all, there was a rich, detailed photo of a beautiful woman and it was my job to save her.

Here, you can see a close up of one part of the original.

mother-torn-closeup

One of the first things I did was remove all of the unnecessary background so I could focus on her face and dress. Then, zooming in, I restored bit by bit, starting with larger areas and then zooming in even deeper for close up, tiny work. I had to recreate a number of areas, like around and through her right eye, and carefully restore her face to reality. The dirty areas were another challenge – having not encountered that kind of damage before, I had to experiment with techniques to make it go away, without ruining patterns and textures underlying it.

Here is the final image, which I was able to enlarge for a 8×10 photo print.

mother-torn-fixed
  • Share/Bookmark

Restoring Fabric and Faces

Wednesday, August 19th, 2009
mother-baby-orig

The trickiest part of this restoration was that the entire photo had a web of fine cracks and some serious deep cracks through both the faces and the fabric, which I needed to restore around without it appearing it had ever been damaged.

While some restorations can be done with a lot of filters and special effects in Photoshop, some need a lot of fine detail work with the graphic tablet and pen.

mother-baby-fixed

The results are worth it – in the end, you can’t even tell that the tears or cracks existed. And the detailed texture in the dress remains as true as the day the photo was taken.

mother-baby-closeup
  • Share/Bookmark