Nice work. Interesting restoration. I use the Solid Color Fill adjustment layer, It makes it easier to adjust the colour on the fly. Gradient Map is great for recolouring too.
I use that as well. In fact, there are several techniques I didn't go into simply because there isn't time to cover every one. I felt these would be the quickest!
I am curious do you have any tips for removing the texture from the old pearl photo paper, which comes with flatbed scanning and reflections it creates. As it does not create a repetitive pattern, the plugins for pattern suppression doesn't really work, and with using the filters for dust scratches, noise etc. I lose a lot of detail.
Hi Laura, that's a great observation. I haven't run into that problem yet. Do you have an example you can email me so I can check it out and visually see what you're referring to? Thanks! You can email me at scuroprof@gmail.com
Hi, that’s a great and useful video. I am working on a long term project to restore my family's large photo archive. Some of the photos were printed really small, like 2 inches by 3 inches. Would you recommend re-photographing the original photos at high resolution to help with the restoration or doesn’t that work? And do you have any tips for photographing photographs? TIA 🙂
I'm surprises you didn't make a copy of your background layer before you make all those changes... Saves a lot of trouble.. But good job with the repair..
Excellent observation! And yes, that's probably the best practice - although sometimes I get excited about a project and forget. I normally do make copies of my background layers, in addition to using the history brush or save multiple versions at different stages. In this tutorial I totally forgot!
you all prolly dont care but does someone know a way to log back into an instagram account? I somehow lost my login password. I love any tips you can give me
Nice work. Interesting restoration. I use the Solid Color Fill adjustment layer, It makes it easier to adjust the colour on the fly. Gradient Map is great for recolouring too.
I use that as well. In fact, there are several techniques I didn't go into simply because there isn't time to cover every one. I felt these would be the quickest!
I am curious do you have any tips for removing the texture from the old pearl photo paper, which comes with flatbed scanning and reflections it creates. As it does not create a repetitive pattern, the plugins for pattern suppression doesn't really work, and with using the filters for dust scratches, noise etc. I lose a lot of detail.
Hi Laura, that's a great observation. I haven't run into that problem yet. Do you have an example you can email me so I can check it out and visually see what you're referring to? Thanks! You can email me at scuroprof@gmail.com
Hi, that’s a great and useful video. I am working on a long term project to restore my family's large photo archive. Some of the photos were printed really small, like 2 inches by 3 inches. Would you recommend re-photographing the original photos at high resolution to help with the restoration or doesn’t that work? And do you have any tips for photographing photographs? TIA 🙂
I'm surprises you didn't make a copy of your background layer before you make all those changes... Saves a lot of trouble.. But good job with the repair..
Excellent observation! And yes, that's probably the best practice - although sometimes I get excited about a project and forget. I normally do make copies of my background layers, in addition to using the history brush or save multiple versions at different stages. In this tutorial I totally forgot!
I was listening to this in the background while working on a photo and I hear ""whites on one side and blacks on the other"
right, tonal values. Did you think I was speaking about something other than lights or darks?
I thought I was going to learn how to make soup...
Hahaha I'm making a video about that soon! :)
you all prolly dont care but does someone know a way to log back into an instagram account?
I somehow lost my login password. I love any tips you can give me
@Frank Orlando instablaster :)