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Still Got a School Photo on the Fridge?

Many of us have those professional school photographs of our children out on display for many years.

The ones in the hallway. On the fridge. The ones you’ve kept tucked in a frame since they were five – even though they’re now twenty-five (or forty-five!).

restore school photograph

These little portraits are more than just a smile on a backdrop. They quietly record the passing of time. And they’re often some of the most looked-at photos in the house.

So if you’ve got an old school photo that’s starting to fade, or one that deserves to be displayed properly, NOW is the best time to get them restored back to their original condition.

That Special Photo?

Every family has those photos.
The ones everyone remembers. The ones that come out, again and again, at birthdays, anniversaries, get-togethers.

 

Maybe it’s one that makes everyone laugh.
Maybe it’s someone no longer here.
Maybe it’s just so unmistakably them, it’s become a kind of shorthand for your whole family.

 

 

We call these the “repeat favourites” – the photos that get talked about, passed around, printed for others, stuck to fridges, and pulled out of albums like old friends.

And if they’re looked at that often, they’re probably worth preserving properly.

If your favourite family photo is starting to fade, crack, or crease, we’d love to help you restore it so it lasts another lifetime.

Maybe not every photo needs restoring. But the ones we return to again and again?
Those are worth saving properly.

Can You Spot The Differences?

Below are two versions of the same photo – but look closer, and you’ll see we’ve made 4 subtle changes! Can you spot them all?

This is just for fun – a little photo challenge for the sharpest eyes out there and a nice way to show off what a difference detail can make!

Add Natural Lifelike Colour to Your Photographs

Imagine seeing an old black-and-white photograph in a whole new way – brought to life in full colour. The past suddenly feels closer, the details more vivid, and the memories more real.

With our professional photo colourisation service, we can carefully restore and add natural, lifelike colour to your treasured photographs. Whether it’s a portrait of a loved one, a family gathering, or a piece of history, colourisation gives a new perspective to the moments that matter.

Photographs Forever Colourisation

Why Colourise Your Photos?

✔ See details you’ve never noticed before
✔ Make your family history feel more real and connected
✔ Create a unique and meaningful gift for loved ones

Simply send us your photo, and we’ll take care of the rest.

Questions About Your Photos? We’re Just a Phone Call Away!

In today’s world, it often feels harder than ever to get hold of someone on the phone. At Photographs Forever, we believe in doing things a little differently. Some might call us old-fashioned, but we think being available to speak directly with our customers is invaluable.

Every photo, enquiry, and customer is unique, and we know that you might want some reassurance before committing to send us your precious photos. Whether you need advice on our services or just want to chat about your specific requirements, we’re here for you every step of the way.

As a small, family team we love hearing from our customers and providing help and advice where we can. While we’re often busy restoring your photos or preparing your beautiful photobooks, we encourage you to leave us a message if we can’t answer right away. We promise to call you back as soon as we can.
So, if you have any questions, big or small, or simply need guidance, don’t hesitate to pick up the phone. Your memories are precious, and we’re here to make the process as easy and reassuring as possible.

Robin’s Solution to ‘Lest We Forget’

Our customer Robin has a very striking story behind this photograph he took during a visit to Auschwitz about 10 years  ago and asked us to restore….

 

Photograph Restoration Example

Here’s his story:

“The photograph was taken approximately 10 years in the Auschwitz-Birkenau Camp (just outside of Krakow).

The image is of Kazimierz Budzinski – who entered the camp on 24.04.1942 and was executed on 27.05.1942.

There was a galleried corridor in the camp adorned with images of inmates – his image struck me hard and I stopped for what seemed some time and examined it…examined his expression and his eyes….there was a look of abandonment and fear. I took the photo and kept it. I took this photograph because I wanted to make sure he and his tragic plight would never be forgotten.

Years later I asked Photographs Forever to preserve it and print it for me – which they did brilliantly and it now adorns a space on the wall in my kitchen. Friends et al who visit ask who he is – and by asking – its ‘job done’ because he has not been forgotten.

I subsequently had his number tattooed on my left forearm – exactly as it appeared on his left breast side and it reminds me of him as well as what we are capable, as humans, of doing. People ask about the tattoo and its significance – and again it serves its purpose well – he has not been forgotten.”

Hopefully by adding this to our blog it will be seen by many more people and will continue to reinforce Robin’s dedication to preserving the memory of this man who represents a huge number of people who suffered a similar fate during the Second World War.

The Appearance of John Kempster’s Photo Album of The Titanic

Stephen Raffield contacted us a while ago as he had managed to obtain a wonderful intact photograph album put together by John Kempster complete with not only his holiday photographs but also some historic and unique images of the Titanic.

Titanic, sets sail, launching Titanic

Here is the story of the album as told by Stephen:

“John Kempster joined Harland and Wolff, Belfast in 1900 and was appointed a managing director in 1906 in charge of the electrical plant. Kempster became involved in the construction and launch of both Olympic and Titanic. He was also a very keen photographer and in 2012 an album of photographs taken and developed by him came to light.

A lady walked into a Wiltshire auction house and asked if the album she was holding was worth anything. As well as a number of photographs of the Kempster’s family holiday in America in 1911 the album contained stunning, never seen before, photos of Olympic leaving Belfast for her maiden voyage and also the launch of Titanic and her own departure from Belfast for the first and last time. The photographs are of exquisite quality and finely detailed. The initial plan of the auctioneers was to break up the album and sell off the photographs singly or in small batches. Steve and Jane Raffield, collectors of Titanic memorabilia, were able to negotiate the purchase of the whole album so that this unique record of both Olympic and Titanic at Belfast would be preserved for the future. Photographs Forever digitalised the photos earlier this year in preparation for the album and selected photos to go into exhibition.

The original Kempster album

The album, photos and the rest of the Raffield Collection are currently on display in Brisbane, Australia.”

This is an article written by Stephen’s son Tom for the  Atlantic Daily Bulletin – Autumn 2024, explaining the story  in greater detail. Many of these historic photographs can be seen in the article.

Atlantic Daily Bulletin 2024

Titanic - Atlantic Daily Bulletin 2024

Titanic - Atlantic Daily Bulletin 2024

Titanic - Atlantic Daily Bulletin 2024

Titanic - Atlantic Daily Bulletin 2024

Original Photograph Restored and Enlarged Over 15x

We recently restored a small 10cm photograph from Ross Howard. It was a photograph of two men and Ross required a new photograph with just one of the men so that it could be printed life size.

The picture below shows the comparative size.

Here is Ross’s story:

“We run a yoga ashram in Southampton called The Yoga Sanctuary. The man in the photo is Swami Yogeshwar Ananda Saraswati, the guru in our lineage, known affectionately to us as Guruji. Guruji left his body in 1985 and I don’t expect there is picture of such detail (and size!) anywhere on the planet. Hence we are truly grateful, Photographs Forever’s work has meant a lot to all of the community here.

“The original photo was retrieved from an ashram in Rishikesh, India.

Swami Yogeshwarananda left home at 14 for a life of renunciation. He found his way to the Himalayas of North India and Tibet where he practiced severe Yogic disciplines for many years. Through this, he became an adept master and began teaching the wisdom of Yoga, setting up several ashrams across northern India. The Sanctuary’s roots stretch back to when our teacher (Steve Harrison) made contact with Guruji at his ashram in Rishikesh. Guruji left his body in 1985 but continues to inspire the work we do here at the Sanctuary to this day.

On a recent trip to the Rishikesh ashram last December we uncovered some photographs that hadn’t seen the light of day for many years. We brought them back to the UK to make digital copies and decided to get one blown up to life-size to display in our Yoga Shala. A few years back Photographs Forever had enhanced another picture of Guruji that we were also able to get blown up in size  so we knew they were the right people for the job!

We couldn’t be happier with the result. It is like he is standing in front of you in life-like detail. I expect this is the biggest and highest quality photo of Guruji anywhere on the earth and it will cherished by the whole community here for many years to come.”

 

Here is the website of the sanctuary : www.yogasanctuary.co.uk

The Fascinating History of Nutley Motor Services Premises

During the last five years we have restored many historic photographs which capture the local history of our village. Nigel is the owner of Nutley Motor Services and he is fascinated by the history of the buildings that are now his premises. So he asked us to restore and frame many of these photographs to display in his main reception area.

This is Nigel’s story:

Well Richard, those amazing photos that we got you to restore and that you somehow managed to work your magic on have a very interesting history attached to them.

There were three key extremely wealthy people back in the late 1800’s that basically pretty much owned most of the land and properties in and around the Nutley and Sheffield Park area. Lady Castle Stewart, who owned the Old Lodge and a large chunk of the Ashdown Forest, John Nettlefold (junior), who owned the Chelwood Vachery up on the Forest, his land went right across to Chelwood Gate, and Albert Turner senior and Albert Turner junior who owned Sheffield Saw Mills, are the people where the main pieces of the jigsaw back in the day and what a rich pattern of life was to unfold.

The Turners were felling down huge areas of forest in around Sheffield Park and the surrounding area, preparing the timber and transporting it to London by rail from Sheffield Park, now known as the Bluebell Railway. As time went by, they found that they had to go further afield to find more timber, which added to the cost of transporting it back to Sheffield Park to send on to London.

That’s where these photographs, that you kindly did for Nutley Motor Services reception area display come into play.

Albert Turner junior, being young and enthusiastic, with grand ideas, stumbles across a large pond in Nutley, Perfect he thought for running his newly acquired steam engines for sawing up the timber in and around the Nutley area, so he acquired the land for a small fee, but would have been a reasonable amount of money back then. He purchased which is now the A22, the land from the A22 and out to Nether Lane and down to Fords Green Nutley, the A22 was just a dirt/mud track back then.

He then built the buildings, now know has Nutley Motor Services on the edge of the pond, as the photographs now show in NMS reception. Hence it was from then on known as the Timber Yard.

Over the years he built his managers and some of his senior employees, foresters’ cottages on the surrounding land around the Timber yard.

Then came his biggest hurdle, his grand idea!

Which is one of the main reasons that he purchased the Timber Yard land and was to apply to have a railway line run across the Ashdown Forest to Edenbridge, so as to ship his freshly cut and sawn timber from the rich forests of Nutley to London.

It’s amazing when you think about it, people come and go, buildings and business disappear, or the buildings are altered, like Nutley Motor Services, Mid Sussex Garage of Chelwood Gate, not to mention how many pubs have been turned into dwellings over the years.

If it wasn’t for photographs, this history would be lost for good!

 

A Picture Brought Back to Life: The Story of PC Austwick

The Murder of PC Austwick (1855-1861)

 

 It’s said that every picture does tell a story.  But for me, the story was minus the picture until I found the excellent team at Photographs Forever.

It was while researching facts about two WW1 soldiers from my village of Lumby, in North Yorkshire that I came across the story of a local policeman who was shot and murdered by a miner.

PC Alfred Austwick was born in Lumby in 1855.  Our village is a place invariably described as a “slumbering hamlet” of about forty houses.  Little has changed since Austwick’s days other than the “thatched cotts” have long gone only to be replaced by barn conversions and new builds but the village still retains its essential charm and peaceful location.  Laurel Farm, where PC Austwick’s father and brother worked, no longer deals in livestock as it once did, but is still a functioning arable farm.

The British Newspaper Archive is a fascinated treasure of facts and I discovered that the murder, which took place about 30 miles away, in Dodworth, near Barnsley, became a national scandal as the man responsible, James Murphy, an itinerant miner with a previous criminal record for burglary and poaching had, after the shooting in the grounds of the Traveller’s Inn, gone on the run for several weeks.  The written style of language is ornate, compared with today, beautifully descriptive and in and amongst the facts I found that several reporters were still intent, even then, on seeking out the salacious gossip!

Over the last few months, I have collated and edited features and articles to build an elaborate picture of what happened.  I was fascinated by how entrenched Christianity was in every area of the lives of people at that time, how fair a trial Murphy received, how there was much compassion for his family and how prison authorities took great care of him.  His relatives were afforded expenses to visit him, he was given the best meat and a chaplain visited him daily.  The death sentence hanged over him but all attempts were made to overturn it.

Beyond the press research I also spent several days in the village of Dodworth and their library – and have been hugely enabled by a retired historian/miner, Steven Wyatt who took time out of his busy life to show me landmarks, to help me understand the area and to help me appreciate what life must have been like then.

Through Steve I was introduced to the owner of the Traveller’s Inn, Jane, who showed me a framed collation of a photocopied newspaper report, Austwick’s whistle and most exciting of all a faded, cut and creased original photo of PC Alfred Austwick, in uniform.

I felt that if I could get the photo restored it would be a fitting image to feature on the cover of the book.  After two photographic experts claimed it wasn’t possible to repair and restore I discovered the excellent team at Photographs Forever – Richard, Amy and Luca.  Not only did they give me the confidence to send it securely to them, but they were at pains to explain how carefully they would manage it.  This was a precious photograph, about 150 years old and it didn’t belong to me.  The team’s customer care is as equal in excellence as the brilliant work they do.  All through the process I was kept informed from the safe arrival of the photograph to the process that they would undertake, to the secure return.

The result was beyond anything that I could have expected.  My faded, armless policeman had been brought back to life – so vividly his eyes seem to engage with mine.

It has been a privilege to remember a man who lost his life so tragically, who left several children without a father and a stricken wife who, at the time of the funeral, was one month pregnant with their sixth child.

PC Austwick’s body was returned to our parish for burial very close to the church gates, and I think of the many hundreds of times I have walked past his grave, never knowing of the story within.

Now, not only can I pay my respects at his graveside, but thanks to the team at Photographs Forever,  I can picture the man who did much to help and protect the lives of villagers in Victorian Britain.

The team helped me tell his story and I remain hugely grateful.

Hilary Robinson’s book The Murder of PC Austwick is available to purchase HERE