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Posts Tagged ‘gift idea’

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!

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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.

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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!

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Hand Tinted Rose

Friday, March 6th, 2009

There was a time when if you wanted a color photograph, the photographer would have to hand tint the black and white photo with colored dyes. This was a very detailed, time consuming process but the result is a beautiful “old fashioned” look that I’ve always loved. When I received this cool young photo of my grandmother Rose, a woman who often wore bright pinks and blues, I knew I was going to have to give it a try – only instead of using dye, I’d use Photoshop.

This is the original photo. As you can see, it’s quite nice – very textured from the paper it was printed on, and only a few minor imperfections.

Rose Original

The first thing I did was scan it, and do some clean up, so it would look like this. I also desaturated it (made it all grey) which removed some of the tiny brown spots that were splattered about.

Rose Cleaned Up

I had the fortune to know my grandmother so I knew she had beautiful blue eyes, light brown hair and a fair, rosy complexion. I started this project trying to approximate those colors myself – but it turned out to be a real roll of the dice, fifty bazillion shades of blue and brown all considered. Then, I had an idea. I could sample colors from an actual photo of her! I had this one, the grandmother I knew growing up.

Rose Source Photo

A few wild and fun hours later – voila – a “hand tinted” old photo of Rose! As with the traditional method, the goal is to get as life like as possible but of course, there is nothing like the real bloom on a Rose’s cheek (hey now, don’t groan!). I found that laying on flat color was relatively easy but for it to look right, quite a bit of fine tuning, detailed painting and color adjustment was needed to give it depth and realism.

Rose Tinted

Here’s a closer view so you can see the great texture that is in this image.

Rose Close Up

For a really nice effect on your old black and white family photos, let’s give tinting a whirl!

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Raggedy Photo

Thursday, February 12th, 2009

Photos, particularly those from the mid to late 20th century, have not really stood the test of time. We all have boxes and albums of family photos from that era that are yellowed and faded from sunlight.

In this photo, taken in the early 1970s, not much is wrong except that it is badly discolored from age. So I’ve scanned it and adjusted the colors, making a digital copy that can be reprinted.

Raggedy Ann and Andy Original

And for the eagle eyed amongst you – yes, that is me on the right. Mom rocked the homemade Halloween costumes!

Raggedy Ann and Andy Restored
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A Man and His Castle

Thursday, February 12th, 2009

This was a fun – a wife contacted me and asked me if I could take a photo of her husband, taken at a wedding in his kilt, and remove him from the background and put him into a photo of a Scottish scene with a castle.

dan.jpg

The castle photo was purchased as stock photography, and then I worked on removing him from the original photo. Some minor correction, and into the new scene he went.

castle.jpg

Once he was in the castle scene, I had to re-size him so he’d seem proportionally correct to the castle door. I cropped the entire image so that the castle tower would seem to be a much bigger building off camera. Some more correction was needed so the lighting would be right. Then I added a shadow to make it realistic.

After that, I applied painting styles to the entire image so that the end result would look like it was made up of brush strokes. I delivered it to the wife as a gift she could frame and give.

Man and his Castle
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Butterfly Memorial

Tuesday, February 10th, 2009

Butterfly Memorial When one of my dear friends lost her grandmother, she held a memorial for her which included the release of as many monarch butterflies as she had lived years.

I took photos of the event on my digital camera, and created this 18×24 photographic quality photo memorial poster for her as a surprise the following holiday season.

The quality of the photos make all the difference in a project like this – we had a spectacular beautiful blue skied day, in a garden full of flowers, and of course the butterflies were magnificent.  This kind of poster could just as easily be done with stock photography of a person’s favorite things, different photos of the same subject, or professional photos taken on a special day.

Imagine a poster like this made from wedding photos – or a child’s first year.  Contact me to discuss a custom poster like this for yourself!

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