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Archive for Photograph Retouching – Page 7

Organise Your Photographs – It’s Easier Than You Think!

 

Shoebox1

Are you one of the many people who has hundreds or even thousands of photographs, some in albums, some in boxes, and in more recent years, huge numbers of digital photographs on the computer? The thought of organising all your precious family photographs can seem quite overwhelming although when it’s done there are huge advantages that make the job very worthwhile.

How good would it be to be able to find the photos you want, when you want them, and end the seemingly endless frustrating searches that we’ve all done in the past. More importantly, when your photographs are organised, future generations will have all the benefits of your efforts. They will know who is who, dates, places and any other detail you may be able to add.  Your photograph archive becomes a valuable heirloom.

It’s Easier Than You Think

At first it may seem like a task that is just too enormous to tackle. The good news is that when it’s broken down into simple steps, it’s much easier than you think, is actually great fun and is very rewarding.

  1. Collect together all loose photographs and albums into one place
  2. Sort the photographs into as near chronological order as you can. During this process put aside any duplicates, sub-standard photographs and ones that you don’t like or are irrelevant.
  3. Scan all the remaining photographs to your computer. Use a scan resolution of 300 – 600 dpi so that any future prints made from the scan will be good quality. If you can’t do this yourself I can do this for you.
  4. Create a sub-folder for each year in the My Pictures folder of your computer and put the scanned images into the appropriate year’s folder. Where the year is not known just use your best estimate. To further refine this you can add a sub-folder in each Year folder using the date and subject. For example name the final folder 2013-10-15 Family Party. By using the date format with the year first this makes sorting the folders more logical.
  5.  Picasa is a free program by Google that makes it very easy and straightforward to keep track of all your photographs. It will automatically find all the photographs on your computer and arrange them all in chronological order keeping the names of each folder.     This will include all the digital photographs you already have on your computer.                                                                                             Picasa
  6. Apart from organising your photos you can also enhance them, crop them, and add different effects, although I would suggest you leave any editing until you have the photos organised.  You can download Picasa free from http://picasa.google.co.uk/
  7. You can also title each photograph with further information about the people, places and any other information required.
  8. Tagging your photographs in Picasa is also a useful way to find what you want quickly. A tag is used for a type of photograph, for example ‘Home’. How this could work is that any photograph from any year that features your home could be tagged with the word ‘Home’. Other tags might be ‘Buildings’, ‘Holidays’ or anything else you choose.
  1. Picasa has great search capabilities. If you type in its search field any word relating to the name of a folder, sub-folder, title or tag it will instantly display all those photographs on your screen. Picasa also has a fantastic face recognition feature which work extraordinarily well. It recognises faces even in large group photos, makes a thumbnail image of just the face. You name each different face and it finds all the photographs with that persons face, at any age, and creates a thumbnail of the face against that person’s folder (automatically created). If it doesn’t get it right (rarely) you have the option to correct it. This is a very useful feature in family history projects.

Backing up Your Photographs For Safety

So now you have all your photographs in one place, you have named folders and photographs and they are easy to find.  It’s important that you back them up. This can be done simply by copying the files onto a separate USB external hard drive, CD or memory stick or better still in the cloud on line. Livedrive (see www.livedrive.com)  is an easy inexpensive cloud-based backup service  – a small price to pay for security of all your precious photographs and any other information you need backed up.

Complex Photograph Montage

Here is an interesting order I completed recently. Not only to combine two photographs that were in very poor condition but also to add the woman from the first photograph – minus baby! – to the second photograph while turning her around so she was facing the right way rather than turning her back on her husband!

Montage 650
This was the email I received from my customer…

“Well you’ve done it again, this time with knobs on and I am not referring to the door knob in one the photos! What an absolutely fantastic result. I appreciate the time and effort you must have put in to get the images of individuals in one photo transferred and included in another. The results to include the clean up and restoration are really brilliant, my great grandmother has literally “rejoined” her family – Fantastic. I can’t wait to present the final prints to members of my family.” John P

An Example of Colourising an Old Photograph

Here is the original photograph, then the restored and colourised version. I knew what colour the Union Jacks were – all the rest were my best guess!

Photograph Before Restoration

Photograph Before Restoration

 

Photograph After Restoration and Colourising

Photograph After Restoration and Colourising

Pet Portraits From Snapshots

Here is an example of a good gift idea – portraits of the family pets.

This example of the history of the family cats, the portraits were made as a gift for the owner from existing snapshots. The scale of the cats’ heads were matched and the busy backgrounds eliminated so that their faces could be seen clearly.

Restored Cat Portraits

Restored Cat Portraits

 

Family Photobooks Are So Worthwhile

Colette first contacted me in October 2012 and since then I have scanned many of her family photographs. I asked Colette to tell her story…..

“I think it all started with me seeing your advert in a local magazine and being sad at seeing my son Fabrice’s photos, taken in the 1970s, deteriorating rapidly. I had made an album for him for his 30th birthday in Dec 2002. I more or less stuck the original photos in chronological order in the album and wrote a line of text underneath each photo with the date and the place it was taken. Fabrice was absolutely thrilled with that first album. For him, it was like going back to his roots, if you see what I mean. I had the impression of having given him his childhood back and he was very moved that I had spent quite a bit of time making that album.
After I saw your advert, I thought you were the person who could save Fabrice’s photos. I gave you a small job and I was very pleased with the work you did, so I unstuck all the photos which were in Fabrice’s handmade album and gave them to you to scan and optimize in a view to make a new album. You showed me the albums you’d made for your children and I thought they were brilliant.That’s when I thought I had to do the same for my other children, Marianne and Hugo, not just Fabrice. While the work was in progress for the first albums which I gave to my children for Christmas 2014, you gave me plenty of advice and you showed limitless patience as I changed my mind time and time again.

My three children got their second album for Christmas 2015 and to see their reaction when they first look at it is priceless and worth all the efforts. They look at each other’s album and exchange memories and ask each other questions. As a parent, it is really wonderful to see. Albums number 3 are in the pipeline for Christmas 2016, for the three of them as their pictorial history continues.”

Here’s a double page spread of one ofr the the finished photobooks – 29cm x 29cm, 100 pages – a great opportunity to enlarge the best photographs too

29cm x 29cm, 100 page  photobook

29cm x 29cm, 100 page photobook

The Miracle of Digital Storage

Photographs To Be Optimised

4057 Photographs To Be Optimised….

A customer recently brought me the entire collection of his photographs dating from 1945 to 1985.

This turned out to be a total of 4057 photographs that completely filled two large suitcases, with each of the 87 folders carefully labelled.

I scanned, cropped and optimised every photograph and put a digital copy of every photograph before and after optimisation on a 32Gb USB Memory stick.

This created a total of 8114 digital files which all fitted onto the memory stick and incredibly there was remaining space for a further 16,000 digital photograph files!

Kingston 650

32Gb Memory Stick containing 8114 digital photographs and still with enough space for a further 16,000 images. 24, 000 photographs on your key ring can’t be bad!

 

Happiness Is a Photograph of Mum

A few days ago I received this touching story from Jane H following my restoring this photograph

Photographs Forever photograph restoration

Photographs Forever photograph restoration

“Our daughter said that as soon as my husband saw the photo of his mother that you managed to create from the old somewhat dilapidated little old photo, he would probably cry. I wondered if I ought to give it to him on some other day rather than his 86th birthday if it would upset him. However I did eventually give it to him yesterday on his birthday.

With my help he unwrapped it as he only has the use of one hand. He said nothing at all just kept staring at it. At last I realized he had tears in his eyes as he hadn’t realized there was any kind of photo of his mother who died many years ago.  He put it on the table next to his chair and just kept picking it up and putting it down still unable to say anything. However as soon as other people begun to arrive to celebrate his birthday he insisted they come and look at the photo he is so proud of.

As he is disabled in a wheelchair he has carers twice a day to help. The first thing he did was to hand them the framed photo explaining in his own way that it is his mother. Our daughter was also quite emotional when she saw it remembering her old cockney grandma. I told her she was right her father had cried but only with emotion and happiness.
He is amazed that you were able to restore such a small,  damaged picture into a perfect photo of his mother who he was so close to as she brought him up alone. He now has the picture on a table where he can see it at all times. We have numerous framed photos of family but until now he had nothing. I just wanted to thank you so much for the trouble you took in restoring the photo and giving him such pleasure.

Thank you again. I have told everyone who has seen it who restored the photo so don’t be surprised if you hear from a few next year!!”

Two Special Ladies Remembered

This is a letter I received from Maurice after I had carried out some work and the story behind his photographs

“I was delighted with the work you did for me. You took old faded, a bit ragged looking photos, some showing cracks, and restored them to original condition.  Your manipulation, to achieve a full length photo showing only my late wife, from two separate group photos, was unbelievable. I get the feeling that if it can be done, you have the skill and the patience to do it.

There is a saying, “Love the work you do and you will never work again”. I suspect this applies to you. I assume most people having photos restored, are rekindling memories, or trying to extend memories, and the fact that you can help them do that must give you great satisfaction.

My reason? My first wife, the mother of my four sons, died 1981. My second wife died 2015, I was married for approximately 30 years to each of them. Two very special ladies. I feel like I have had two lives. So photos have been resurrected and restored, and photos have been enhanced, and thanks to you are now on display. Thanks once again Richard, I wish you well for the future. Yours sincerely Maurice.”

Here are the photographs Maurice is referring to

Example of Photograph Restoration

Example of Photograph Restoration

Photograph Manipulation Example

Photograph Manipulation Example

Photograph Manipulation Example

Photograph Manipulation Example

Restoration of Family History Photographs Creates Full Gallery

Here is an interesting story from Graham Jones who has carried out a massive amount of research on his family history with great results to show for his hard work. Here it is in his own words:

“Recently I have been working with Richard to create a set of some 20 framed photographs that now form a complete record of my family back to 1850. The initial idea came from a very battered, postcard size photograph dated 1895 that showed my great-grandparents and their eight children. I asked Richard to scan, restore, enlarge to A3 size, title and frame the photograph. The result caused so much interest in my family that apart from ordering a further three copies, the wider project was born. Collectively, the family has pooled our best photographs of parents, grandparents, great-grandparents and even two great great grandparents.  Apart from normal restoration and enlargement, Richard has also prepared several composites to splice together the various groupings that we requested. The complete set now forms its own “gallery” in my home and the whole family is delighted with the result” 

Here are some of the photographs in question and the gallery Graham has created

Photograph Restoration/Montage

Photograph Restoration/Montage

Photograph Restoration/Montage

Photograph Restoration/Montage

 

Restored Photograph Gallery

Restored Photograph Gallery

Please Don’t Try This At Home….Don’t Find Out The Hard Way!

I received this email from John P which I have to admit, because of his clever writing style, I actually found very amusing –

“I recently found an old photo of my Grandfather, 5 x 3 inches. It was in remarkable condition except for an orange stain under his nose which extended across his face towards his left eye. Under a magnifier this looked like surface food material which I thought I could remove by gentle washing with minimal quantities of water wet tissue. I appeared to be winning, then horror. I noticed that small specks of the image had been removed – see under his nose and to the left and left lower cheek. I was extremely lucky that was all that was damaged, it could have been much worse.
Then, I stupidly thought I could repair this “slight” damage by applying scrapings of pencil lead!!! What an idiot. Anyway this photograph now desperately requires the attention of an expert.
I attach a digital image of the photo so that you can see what is required. Please note there is a very small scratch, me again, on his right shoulder which also had my lead pencil treatment.
If I send the photograph to you can you restore the damage and clean the image up  i.e. remove the stain and repair the bits I removed and include taking the lead pencil material away? I would also like you to make digital enhanced reproductions, on paper, of the same image. Thank goodness there are experts like you that twits like me can turn to.

Here’s the evidence and the results after restoration-

Photo Restoration  - Before and After

Photo Restoration – Before and After

I am pleased to give you permission to use my plea for your help. It will hopefully make others decide to leave the required expertise to the experts like yourself. Thanks for asking.

Thanks for everything. I have other photos which are in a far worse state, not due to any of my doings this time, for you to consider their rescue. I will be in touch in due course as I need to search them out.