Lisas_Botanicals opened this issue on Apr 26, 2001 ยท 10 posts
Lisas_Botanicals posted Thu, 26 April 2001 at 5:57 PM
mjshepherd posted Thu, 26 April 2001 at 6:39 PM
Gee, the originals must have been in quite a state.... sorry, I don't know where to start, but you seem to be heading the right way. It may just be me, but for the era they depict these people seem very relaxed & at ease with the camera compared to usual pictures of this time where they would be 'hold still...I said STILL, BOY!!!' Hope someone else can be more constructive technically :-) Mike.
Lisas_Botanicals posted Thu, 26 April 2001 at 8:08 PM
vkharito posted Thu, 26 April 2001 at 9:42 PM
I completely agree with Alpha. I have done my share of free retouching for friends, but this is an utter nightmare. These images are probably recoverable, at least to some extent, but keep in mind that it will be many of hours of tedious work before you can make them look presentable. And if you were to take these to a professional retouch service, you'd be out of a few hundred quid for sure. But hey, if you live for a challenge, go for it, very often these kind of projects are fun, and give you a great feeling of accomplishment once you're done. Start with levels, curves and spotting, but be prepared for some painting as well, digital or otherwise.
Jack Casement posted Fri, 27 April 2001 at 12:00 PM
I also have done quite a bit of photo re-touching and it seems that you are on the right track by using Levels etc. I have to say that quite a few of these are, IMHO, way beyond repair and I am sure that the professional re-touching houses would stay clear of many of them. I always found that the hardest part was where the damage was on the face particularly through the eye. No matter how careful I was, when I had finished it never looked like the same person. First of all change them into Greyscale and go for it. Good luck
Jan-Michael posted Sun, 29 April 2001 at 8:58 AM
Attached Link: http://www.quiknet.com/~frcn/Old2New.html
try this tut...Jan-Michael posted Sun, 29 April 2001 at 9:03 AM
Attached Link: http://the-internet-eye.com/HOWTO/1999/PhotoRest/default.htm
hope these help... JMzimmer posted Sun, 29 April 2001 at 11:45 AM
Well, I think you can recover more than this, but as you say, it will be a painstaking and timeconsuming task. Arturo
Lisas_Botanicals posted Wed, 02 May 2001 at 10:48 AM
Thank you so much for all the good tips and links. I'm sorry it took so long to reply. I'm waering too many hats these days and find time to linger anywhere very short. I'm going to try to recover the wagon full of baskets and the woman with the washed out shoulder who looks like she may be wearing a hat. The rest will have to just stay as they are, I guess. :) Thank you again! :) Lisa
Colm_Jackson posted Fri, 04 May 2001 at 8:49 AM
I would say that images 2, and 8 through to 11 stand a pretty good chance of recovery. Scan them as big as you can. Don't forget that you can get rid of a lot of the work by cropping and vignetting. The clone tool is your best friend in this kind of work.