Showing posts with label Photo Repair. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Photo Repair. Show all posts

Friday, March 16, 2018

Call for Damaged or Deteriorated Family Photos!

My gorgeous friend, Elizabeth, posed for
my 1920s shoot in Lighting III
I've been away from my blog for about 18 months and have been missing it terribly! Well, I've been missing it when I've had two moments to stop and breathe. I've been doing and learning amazing things in that time and my journey is almost at an end. You see I went back to school in October of 2014 to use my Post-9/11 GI Bill to pursue a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in Commercial Photography. Between being in school full-time and being a mom, wife, and Scouter something had to give.

I've learned so much from my amazing faculty at Rocky Mountain College of Art + Design in Lakewood, Colorado and I've met some incredible fellow students who are just so incredibly talented! It's been a great experience and I look forward to the next part of my life's journey beginning.

I've taken some great portraits, still life photos, and worked on a little digital restoration. I've been working with non-profits like the Colorado Coalition Against Sexual Assault (CCASA) and the Colorado Coalition Against Domestic Violence (CCADV) to provide marketing materials to further their membership and causes and I'm hoping to get an internship with a social advocacy non-profit. Fingers crossed.

What does this have to do with genealogy? Well, I'm looking to move deeper into the "digital restoration" that I mentioned above. So I'm going to put out a call for damaged or deteriorated family photos. What I'm looking to do is to improve my skills and get more examples of what I can do on my business page, Cheryl Cayemberg Photography. If you would like me to try to fix a family photo email me through my photography website's contact page and send me the scanned photo. I'll let you know if I think I can fix it or if it's currently beyond my skills. I won't be charging for this because I'd like to use the before and after images for my website.

I never knew how beautiful an artichoke was until I cut one
open for a photoshoot!
Send me pictures!

I'll be back sometime in the fall after my internship ends to post more genealogy finds as well as talk about photo repair. I use Photoshop and Lightroom which means I'll be most often talking about ways you can restore your images using those programs, but many photo editing software will have similar tools and nothing I blog about is going to be too technical.

Until next time have fun tending those roots and to my fellow Irish peeps and those who are Irish at heart...Happy Saint Patrick's Day (a day early)!

Thursday, October 6, 2011

Photo Friday - Step by Step to my Photo Repair

Original Photo
Repaired and Cropped Photo
























Often when I post photos that I've repaired I get asked what software I use and how I did it, so I finally decided to do a post showing what I did.  This was a relatively basic repair so I figured it was a good place to start.  I'm sure that there are people out there with much more experience than I have in photo repair.  I'm self-taught and the tricks I've learned have suited me well so far.

Not every step is covered, but the most important parts are.  You'll have to play with your software's opacity levels and the various sizes of brushes to use with the cloning tool, but I imagine that most programs are relatively similar.  For this photo repair I used Microsoft Office Picture Manager to adjust the contrast and then Serif Photo Plus X2 for the rest of the repair.  It was a cheap and well rated photo editing software that I purchased through Amazon.com.

I don't know who the people are in this photo (maybe my family can help me out here when they read this post), but I've been told that my aunt was the artist that drew on the photo!  It wasn't a difficult repair, but if you're new to using photo-editing software there may be one or two swear words that escape your mouth as you go through your learning curve (at least there was for me when I first started!)

I opened the photo in Microsoft Office Picture Manager and adjusted the contrast to 10 then to 20.  Adjusting the contrast usually works well in grayscale photos, but you'll want to increase the percentage of contrast slowly so if you go too far and don't like the results, you can bring it down a little.

Contrast increased to 10%

Contrast increased to 20%

You can notice the big change in the scribbles in the sky of the photo.  The contrast removed much of it, without removing detail from the rest of the photo.

You then should familiarize yourself as to what the controls for your software's cloning tool and zoom look like.  This is what the Serif's look like:

After selecting the cloning tool the brush and opacity box automatically appeared at the top of the screen

I then zoomed in on the area I wanted to work on first.  In this case it was the sky.  Since this is a black & white photo the sky came across as white so this was a fairly easy fix with the cloning tool (set at 100% opacity in this case and I used a fairly large brush).  For my software I moved the brush circle to an area I wanted to clone, held down the Shift key, and left-clicked my mouse (you won't notice anything when you do this).  Then I moved to the area I wanted to replace with what I just copied and left-clicked my mouse.

NOTE: When cloning it does not simply copy that small area you clicked on.  It anchors the cloning to that specific area in relation to the next place you click.  So as you move the clone brush down the area you are painting over, both areas move together.  This means that if you aren't careful you may copy something that doesn't match: 

The circle is where I am cloning to and the "+" is where I am copying from.

As you can see in the example above, I've accidentally copied part of the building as I tried to repair the sky.  It's an easy fix.  You just click the undo button.

Eventually (and relatively painlessly) the sky was fixed and I moved on to areas on the bride's dress and white spots on the groom's suit.

The sky fixed

When repairing the groom's suit I used 100% opacity.  It's fairly dark so I really didn't need to be concerned with blending.  For the bride's gown, I used an opacity between 60-70% depending on what looks best.  The undo command is your friend as you figure it out.  I also used a fairly small sized brush so I could work in the much smaller area.

Remember that you don't need to click and drag while cloning.  When doing small repairs just left-click a little at a time.  You may need to experiment as to which areas are the best to "copy" or "clone" from.  You want something that is close in color/texture to the area you are repairing.  The opacity tool allows for better blending.  When I repaired the bride's gown, had I selected an opacity of 100% it would have copied the area exactly and it would have looked awful.  Copying at 60% opacity allowed the crayon/pencil area to be repaired with the copied area but it only matched the color at 60% of the original so the change looked much nicer.  For my lack of communication skills, allow me to show the difference:


100% opacity
60% opacity























At 100% you can actually see a circle where I clicked to repair the area.  With 60% you can see the repair, but only because the flaw to the left and right remain.  In the finished product it is barely noticeable.  If I had repaired the entire area at 100% opacity the result would have been a completely discolored (and brighter) line.  The point of a repair isn't to change the essence of the picture, but to remove the flaws.

I finally completed all the repairs that I wanted and saved the image.  I then went back to Microsoft Office's Picture Manager and cropped the picture to remove the white at the right side of the picture.

After cropping
Before cropping























NOTE:  Always remember to save the project you are working on under a different name so that if you don't like the results you can start over with the original.  If you just save your work, the original will be gone and the undo button won't work after a "save".

Photo repair takes a little patience, but once you get the hang of it, I promise that it does get quicker!

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Wordless Wednesday - Fine Scratches Removed and Edges Repaired

Before
After
























Another picture that I scanned from my step-father's (James Trunzo) side of the family.  I really need to identify the people in the pictures that I scanned though!

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Wordless Wednesday - A Repaired Photo of Two Children

After
Before

This was a photo I scanned and repaired last summer.  It is two children in my step-father's (James Trunzo) family.  I just need to figure out who they are!

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Wordless Wednesday - The Next Tin Type Repair

Before
After























Note to self:  Don't try to repair photos at Chick-Fil-A.  There's too much glare on the screen!

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Wordless Wednesday - Repaired Card Photo

Before
After

 Not too shabby.  The more I do this, the less I swear when I'm doing it!  See...there are benefits!

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Thrifty Thursday - Use the Photo Software You Already Have!

If you have a reasonably new computer, chances are you already have photo editing software on your computer.  My computer came with Microsoft Picture Manager.  Arguably not proper editing software, but it's not without it's uses and it was FREE...or at least it didn't cost any more money to have it on the computer I was already buying!

I know PhotoShop is excellent software (my sis swears by it and is well-versed in using it).  Drawback....it is expensive!  Yes, there are toned-down, cheaper versions of PhotoShop, but if I'm going to shell out the $$$ I don't want to start playing around and realize that it's missing something I want.  If you're going to be doing a lot of photo editing, perhaps it's a good option, but I couldn't make the commitment.  Buyer-fear and my sister is a 2 day drive from me so if I get stuck, she's not there to rescue me!

The photo editing software I eventually purchased is certainly a topic for a future post, but what I wanted to illustrate is that the free stuff isn't without worth.  In fact, I use Microsoft Picture Manager before editing with my other software.  It's not that my other software can't do something that Picture Manager can, but it's just so easy that I've over-looked learning it on the new software.  I'm bad, I know, and eventually I'll learn it.

If you checked out my "Wordless Wednesday" post yesterday you'll see 5 pictures as I went through the editing process to correct a fairly faded family photograph.  Here's the original photo and the first adjustment I made:

Adjustment #1
Original
























A pretty noticeable difference isn't it?  I did it by clicking one button on Picture Manager...the "auto correct" button...and I'm not joking.  That is the difference that one, uneducated click made in recovering this picture.  Keep in mind that I scan all of my pictures at 600 d.p.i. (at least).  You want as much detail as possible.

I use my Picture Manager to rotate, crop (which I don't often do with genealogy pics like this one), adjust color, contrast, and remove red eye.  The tools that come with the program are supposed to be simple.  Just remember not to hit "save" if you aren't happy with your finished product!

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Wordless Wednesday - Repaired Card Photo


Original Photo
Adjustment #1























Adjustment #2
Adjustment #3























Final Picture
It's truly amazing what photo software can do!  The only difference between the final product and Adjustment #3 is just adjusting the color to make it more black and white than sepia-toned, but I like the sepia just as much (and I didn't take it completely out of the final picture either).  In fact Adjustment #3 looks a bit sharper to me...maybe I need to call that the final product!

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Wordless Wednesday - Repaired Tin Types

Before
After
I don't know who's in these tin types.  They were from an album that was most likely my great-great aunt Ella Quirk's.  I figured that for the next several "Wordless Wednesdays" I'd fix up the pictures (not all are tin types). My finished product isn't perfect, but not bad for my level of photo repair!