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Archive for Photograph Retouching – Page 7

V-Bomber Refueling Lightnings Above Niagra Falls – Colourised Photograph

This fantastic photograph of a Victor V Bomber refueling English Electric Lightnings over the Niagara Falls is one that I had the pleasure to restore and colourise recently. I found the correct colouring of all the aircraft from technical drawings I found on Google Images.
Niagra

4 Photo Panoramic Scene Merged and Restored

I received this photograph as four photographs stuck together and folded as that was the best way with the technology of the time. When it was restored I printed a 40inch wide print.

Panorama-Comparison

Here’s the story….

“The Cuillins is a range of rocky mountains located on the Isle of Skye, we spent many happy family holidays on Skye when I was a child and my Dad, George Smith who was a very talented amateur photographer, spent years perfecting his panorama of “the Cuillins” as we used to call them, he unfortunately passed away in 2015 and we recently went through some of the many images he had painstakingly crafted over the years, including this one which was in fairly bad condition having been folded up & stored in a box in a damp sitting room in a French Farmhouse for the last 10 years; I love this image as it brings back so many wonderful memories of my Dad and the fun we used to have on Skye in the shadow of the Cuillin, I am so grateful to Richard for the amazing restoration and for enabling such a precious memory to be recovered and displayed once again in its full glory.”

Fascinating Photograph During the Blitz – London 1940

My customer Karen E tells the story of this (now restored) photograph

“This photograph was taken on a day when King George VI and Queen Elizabeth visited Poplar during the Blitz. My father as a boy is standing in the right upper window with his mum on his right and his best friend beside him.

My father remained in Poplar throughout the war with his father who was a stevedore in the docks and his mother who was a seamstress. Their house suffered damage in the war when an incendiary device came through the roof and landed on his parent’s bed, luckily it did not ignite and they managed to wrap it in the bedding and throw it out of the window!”

Here’s the original photograph I received:

KE

Disintegrating Photograph Restored

I recently received this photograph which had been kept in a photo frame and the entire top surface of the photo had come away from its paper backing and so the image consisted of a large number of very frail flakes that would have blown away in the slightest draught!

It was an important photo and so I was able to digitally painstakingly put it back together and with the help of two other photographs from the same customer I as able to use the persons eyes and add a complete dog! 

GF_0005-before

 

GF1_0005 GF1_0004 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Here’s the finished photo:

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Merry Christmas To All

 

christmas-2016-before-after

Merry Christmas to everyone – before and after! Here’s looking forward to 2017 being a great year.

9 Great Ways To Transform Your Photographs

With Christmas now on the horizon here are some ideas for a unique gift that’s ideal for those who can be tricky to find something a bit different.

Here just a few examples of the many ways I can transform your photographs….


If you have a photograph that has faded in its frame, it can be restored and re-coloured.

 

 


Two or more photographs can be combined and you can choose the people you want in the finished photo

 

 


Family groups can be ‘adjusted’ to include or exclude people!

 

 


Couples can finally be together in the same photograph.

 

 


Snapshots of pets can be made into portraits or montages

 

 


Treasured photographs that have suffered years of damage can be restored to their original state.

 

 


Combine a favourite photograph with a more interesting background.

 

 


Create a family montage from a selection of favourite photographs
 


Not sure which photos to use but can see the potential?
A Photographs Forever Gift Voucher of any value could be the answer.

Sentimental Framed Photograph After Restoration

I received this message from Irene after I has restored her photograph and I was quite touched –

“Thank you so much for your recent work which was excellent as usual. The photograph you restored fits beautifully into the frame and looks wonderful surrounded by a verse from one of my favourite songs.  No apologies for the sentimental nature of the words!  I’ve sent you a copy so you can see the end result.

irene-photo-framedr-web

There were some lovely surprises with the negatives. Some photographs I have never seen before and others have not been seen by the family for years.  I have no idea who the people playing football are!  I have included several of the photographs in my writing –  which is nearly finished by the way.”

Always very gratifying to receive this kind of message.

8 Great Tips to Help You Make The Most of Your Photographs

There is no better way to remember all the great times in life than through the photographs you have from the past, present and future. Previous generations have very few photographs compared with the number we have today. Photographs are so important yet they often remain locked inside our phones or packed away in a box.

So make the most of your photographs.  Here are 8 tips….

8 TIPS TO MAKE THE MOST OF YOUR PHOTOS

  1. Download the photos from your phone – either onto your computer or a cloud-based storage site such as MyKnowHowCloud.com where you can store all your photographs and any other important files.
  2. Make prints and enlargements of the best photographs, frame them and get them out on display so you can enjoy them.
  3. Photographs are a great way to remind you of good times that you’ve had and important events in your life.
  4. Photographs are the best way to remember parents, grandparents and past generations. In many really old photographs the people in them often look very serious in formal poses in studios. These were sometimes the only photographs that existed and they have a special charm and look great when enlarged and framed.
  5. Create a photo book of your favourite memories. Your photos are the record of your life so far. A photo book of your family life in pictures is a wonderful thing to have and will give you and others a huge amount of pleasure.
  6. Taking photographs today is a fantastic way of spending time that costs virtually nothing. It’s creative, social and rewarding. We take as many photos each day now as in the first 74 years of photography. It’s important to remember to do something positive with the photos you take.
  7. If they’re not right, fix them! With the fantastic technology available today virtually any photo that is is in some way not as good as you’d like it to be can be resolved with digital software. You can fix lots of elements yourself with free programs such as Google Picasa.
  8. Use Photographs Forever as a resource for any advice you may need with your photographs. You can call me any time. It is my passion that you make the most of your photographs. Get them on display, and get them scanned so you have digital copies in case the original prints get lost or damaged.  If they need improving either do it yourself or let me do it for you. Let there be photographs!

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