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Photo Repair. An natural eye...

posted by nezbitten, Sep 6, 2007 4:44 PM — 7 comments

There are a few fundamentals to photo restoration that must be addressed. Unless you can appreciate perspective, light and shade and or the natural environment and how light may affect one object differently under certain circumstances, then this could make or break a restoration.

Example: An old photo which is wrinkled, torn and damaged in the foreground, it’s a landscape with a building and some people in it, they stand in front of their house.



Photo with permission of owner and is subject to copywright.

When restoring land and rough ground, don’t simply grab the clone tool and heal tools and swipe eagerly over the foreground to repaint the grass or rubble or dirt. This can lead to repeated patterns and evidence of short cutting the restoration. Take your time to analyse the scene. If there are tracks on the road or rough ground made by vehicles or carts, look how the ground may have been disturbed and restore it disturbed. Don’t be tempted to clean up and area and make it all nice and uniform and be artistic, restore it, nature is not uniform especially landscapes.

Also examine where the light is coming from, lets say you’ve fixed you foreground and removed the tears and evened out the ground, but does it look restored, if it does it’s not right. You need to place rocks and grass realistically random, and in the case of the tracks make sure the ground follows a natural path of disturbance. The light of shadow can be added last to give the slow moving shadows and rolling tone of the ground, with the old friend dodge and burn. Make sure you use a large soft brush set to 5-12 percent to darken mid tones and think hard where the ground is lower or higher and apply subtle shadow where needed to bring life back to a flat landscape or foreground. Experiment with darkening the shadows too, but don’t over do it subtlety is the key here and realism is the most important.



If you don’t have the eye for this sort of thing then you may miss what’s wrong with your restoration and may never work out no mater how hard you look why it doesn’t look quite right.

One again I hope this helps some people slow down and observe, I know Photoshop is a quick fix sometime but it needs to be used slowly and thoughtfully.

Once again i hope this helps a few people slow down and think hard about the photo before restoring.

Neil








Comments | RSS

1. posted by crisderaud, Sep 8, 2007 4:22 PM

Your work is incredibly good. You restore not only the photos but the historical record within them.


2. posted by nezbitten, Sep 8, 2007 7:27 PM

Thanks, you are right. Its a historical record, a memory, a familly heirloom and a historical record, sometimes its a peice of art too! Keep checking back for further posts.


3. posted by xsmoke, Sep 18, 2007 8:57 AM

Piece of really good work! May I ask you how much time it took?


4. posted by X-BASS, Sep 18, 2007 9:42 AM

Really good, congratulations for a well done job.

I' with you, if it looks restored isn't a good job.

JC, Spain.


5. posted by nezbitten, Sep 20, 2007 11:50 PM

This one took around 2.5 hours i think. But i had to keep coming back to it, otherwise if i see it for so long i dont spot whats wrong anymore. If i go away and the come back with fresh eyes and mind, its easier to see.


6. posted by ckgd2, Oct 6, 2008 11:41 AM

great !!! .... but i have one question: how did you find face that guy with black hat? a can`t see it on first photo :)


7. posted by nezbitten, May 17, 2010 6:13 AM

the cleint was happy for me to take a aface from another photo

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