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PhotoFixRestore

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Lieutenant Tilley: WWII Army Portrait Colorized

7/2/2019

1 Comment

 
Lamar State College is a two year school in Orange, Southeast Texas. And this year it is celebrating its first 50 years in education. These days, the College has nearly 3,000 students and offers courses in five divisions: liberal arts, mathematics and science, business and technology, education and allied health. It offers 30 technical programs and is a jewel to the town of Orange, the surrounding communities and the wider Southeast Texas and Southwest Louisiana.
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Lamar State College is also a school that remembers its history, and its modest beginnings in the former Tilley Elementary School (then an extension of Lamar University). Tilley Elementary commemorates a heroic young man named William Tilley who heeded his Nation's call and enlisted to serve in WWII. Tragically, lieutenant "Bill" Tilley became the first fatality from Orange, Texas in that terrible conflict.

The school needed a formal portrait of Lieutenant Tilley to grace their halls - but none was to be found. There was an old monochrome portrait – but it was not in great shape. Could the old photo be restored? Could it perhaps (gulp) be colorized? Which is where PhotoFixRestore came in! Working with Lamar State College we were able to make the photo restoration and, after some research to confirm colors for his Army uniform, add color to the old photo and bring it back to life. The College chose to have us print the portrait at 16" x 20" on super premium Epson "Exhibition Fiber" paper.
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It's not all hard work and study at Lamar State College of course. The school just welcomed its first athletic team. And this being Southeast Texas and the school being located just above the gulf - with all its rivers and lakes and estuaries - that team is, of course, the fishing team. And their mascott? Tilley the Gator!
Many thanks to Amy Moore at Lamar College for allowing us to share this wonderful story.
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New Book Features Our Sumptuous Photo Colorizing Work!

1/12/2018

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A major new book on the history of Clay County, Kentucky has been published featuring over a dozen historical photos - sumptuously colorized by the digital artists right here at PhotoFixRestore!

"The Clay We Were - A Visual Journey" celebrates the early history of Clay County in the western Appalachians and the special breed of hardy people who called it home. The 450 page, large format volume was curated by the Clay County Genealogical and Historical Society and contains more than 1800 photos!
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(We made the cover!)
The history of Clay County is also the history of the westward movement and settlement of people across the vast United States.  "Clay County has been a center for both salt and coal production, timber and agriculture, beautiful homes and rich traditions, a place where people are known for hard work, steadfast faith, and family values," the book tells us.

Working with the professionals at the Genealogical and Historical Society, we were involved in helping select images appropriate for restoration and colorizing. We then carried out research to determine appropriate colors.  For example, in the image of an older gentleman standing in front of a country store (see slideshow below) we were able to locate a number of historical advertising signs to inform our choice of palette. Then we went to work!
We were stunned to read that we were given a very generous shout out:

"To our new friend in California, Jane Shafron, at Your Story Here (dba as PhotofixRestore), the work you do to colorize old photos is amazing! We know everyone is going to be as impressed as we are with the finished products." 
The Clay County Genealogical and Historical Society is in the forefront of historical societies in discovering and researching its own history and making that history accessible to its people - and to folks all across the country. The quality of the work is astonishing.

If you would like a copy of this intriguing and important hard cover tome (sewn, not glued) then you can order copies direct from the Society.  Visit their website (https://www.clayfamilies.org/) or email the good people there at [email protected].
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Unique Gift Idea: Colorize an old B&W Photo!

11/15/2017

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This time of year, many of our clients are asking us to colorize an old black and white photo to give as a gift. It is often an old photo of a grandmother or a grandfather, or a parent back in their glory days! Sometimes it's a picture of a loved one who has now passed.  Or, it's a color picture which, with the passage of time (and poor original chemistry) has lost its vibrancy.

Colorizing an old black and white photo can make it come alive in a whole new way. The image might be familiar but the addition of carefully chosen colors can give the photo a whole new lease on life! Details which had been overlooked, all of a sudden become apparent.
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Colorizing an old black and white photo

The process for colorizing an old black and white photo is very straightforward.  We scan the image with our pro equipment then bring it into Photoshop. (If time is a factor we can also work with your scan.) We clean up any scratches, spots and tears. We inquire about colors and if the client has knowledge of any particular tones that apply. We identify any items which, with a few web inquiries on our part, may have had particular colors (e.g. uniforms, insignia, grocery items, etc) and we do that research. And we get to work. The process is meticulous - but with our experienced digital photo artists it can be done fairly briskly.

Ultimately, it is a blend of technology and art.  And a big part of the exercise is judgment and restraint - overly bright and super-saturated colors seldom work with older images.  The result, done right is a new heirloom that will be a treasure for generations. (Here is more about our photo colorization services.)
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Apply your colorized photo to anything!

Once completed, most people ask us to print the colorized black and white photo on one of the quality papers we use for our photo repair and  restoration work.  Exhibition Fiber or an archive cotton paper both work well.  More on photo printing papers... 

But you can get even more creative if you wish.

What about cups and plates, mouse pads, fridge magnets and canvas prints? All great ideas for your restored colorized photo.  These days, the list is almost endless:  Metal prints, acrylic prints, posters, iPhone cases, Galaxy cases, greeting cards, throw pillows, duvet covers, tote bags, t-shirts, sweatshirts, baby onesies, greeting cards, and the list goes on. Imagine the delight and surprise of your loved one!
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Or, how about making it into a real work of art?  Advances in print technology now give us the freedom to be truly creative with our old photos and opens up whole new possibilities for display and enjoyment.

You can print on large wood panels which allows the grain to show through. Or for an "industrial, shabby chic or bohemian look", some folks have their image made into "engineer prints" - like the large, lightweight prints used by architects.  The New York Times has gathered a number of these cutting edge ideas into a very helpful article: "Turning Your Photos into Art".
Sounds like fun right? Give Jane a call today!
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Can I Get a Restored Photo from a News or Magazine Cutting - or a Yearbook?

3/2/2017

18 Comments

 
Sometimes the only image we have of somebody or some thing is a cutting made from a newspaper.  Maybe it's Mom's old wedding announcement and photo; maybe it's a sports shot or a business story in a local paper. In most cases the newspaper company has disappeared or won't return your call!

In our photo repair and photo restoration business, we get a steady stream of news and magazine cuttings to turn into photos.  We also get asked to make a proper photo from school and college year books. Can you make a proper photo from a news cutting? Can it be done well?
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From a distance things look great - up close, you see the dots.

Understanding Halftone

It is helpful to understand that news, magazine and book images are magical.  News images are comprised of black dots and white space.  At a distance they look fine - up close, not so much.  The printing technique is known as "halftone" - which converts grey tones into a series of dots.  The human eye only has limited resolving power and, at a distance, is tricked into seeing these dots as continuous tone. "Halftone" then is a massive misnomer.  There is only one tone: and it is black. The process is very ingenious: For lighter tones the black dots are small and surrounded by a generous amount of white space.  For darker tones, the black dots are bigger and there is hardly any white space - maybe none. The secret is viewing distance - at a proper distance they look just fine.

Improving a Halftone Image

 Converting a halftone to a proper photo is quite straightforward from a photo repair or photo restoration technical point of view.  You carefully blur the overall image (maybe a Gaussian blur, maybe use the "median" filter) then you "sharpen" it - increasing the contrast between the light and dark areas. The art comes in managing the trade-off between keeping the dots apparent and accepting some blur.

Finally you clean up any dots or stray lines and adjust contrast and maybe add some color. We always add a border the same tone and texture as the news or magazine paper stock - as most cuttings are really squashed in there. The real art comes in managing expectations - halftones are very low quality and no amount of Photoshop magic can replace what is no longer there.  (A small face in a larger picture - say a sports photo - might be constituted by only a dozen dots across and only a few more down.)
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Getting a news photo or magazine cutting ready to restore

Some of the hard work in getting a halftone news or magazine cutting or a year book illustration ready to fix can be done when you scan.  Here are five tips:
1. Adjust the scanner setting to "descreen" - this will lessen the impact of the dots. (If the thing asks you for # lines per inch ("lpi") most old newspapers printed at around 85, magazines maybe 133.)
2. Set the resolution to 600 dpi.
3. Place a black backing card behind the cutting on the glass before you scan - this will balance out the effect of any printing on the reverse side of the cutting.
4. If the cutting has folds or creases, align the crease so that it orientates in the same direction as the movement of the scan light - this will normally be from top to bottom and may require you to place the cutting at an odd angle on the glass.
5. If your scanner has a "sharpening" feature - turn it off and make sure you are scanning in "picture" mode - not document mode. Always scan in color even though the clipping is black and white (actually, probably quite yellow).

So yes, you can get a proper photo from a news cutting and if you are careful it won't be too bad at all!
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How do I Love Thee Photo? Let Me Count the Ways...

1/18/2017

0 Comments

 
Our relationship to our personal photographs is a lot richer than it is with other aesthetic objects such as painted or drawn art.  Photographs have aesthetic, historic, emotional, familial as well as fulfillment dimensions - to name just some.  So it pays to preserve, display and celebrate our treasured images; and if they need repair or enhancement, to restore or refurbish them also.

One of the things we have learned in the many years we have been fixing old photos is that photos are multi-dimensional. They satisfy our emotional, intellectual and spiritual needs in unique ways. Looking at someone else's photographs you are likely to lock on to the photo's aesthetics - its colors, structure, physical condition and subject matter: is it pleasing to the eye?  If yes, a stranger to the image will be impressed.  If no, they will look away.  But for the owner of the image, aesthetics is important but really just the starting point.
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Our personal photographs are a moment in time, significant to us, frozen for eternity. They are a true form of time travel. What is a photograph if not a privileged glimpse through a small square window into another time and another place?  And prior to the video age they were the only form of time travel. Regardless of how well the elements of an image are arranged, old photos have a historic dimension: they are the past still living and looking unblinking back at us.

And our own photographs have a unique emotional power.  Who can look at a picture of a lost parent, their own wedding, a freshly born child, or a moment of sporting triumph and not be affected? We are connected to our personal photographs whether we like it or not.  We own them but they also own us.  Ever tried to cull that big pile of old family photos?  Cull? Kill: That is how it feels to place a personal photograph into the trash. So we don't do it and resultingly we all have way too many photos piled up!

Many of our old photos also form part of an unofficial family history.  Here is mother when she was just a girl; here is our brother when he turned 40. Neither of them are at the same place now but these photos are all the more important because our family members have moved on. Because we are the person we are - and we are also the sum of all the people we have been.  Our personal photographs are a reminder of the people we have been.

Photographs are also an achievement and one that we take satisfaction and sometimes pride in - they fulfill us. You assembled all those people after Thanksgiving and now here they all are in your snapshot never to be reassembled in the same way every again. You did that; you made that. You felt the mood, you saw the chance, you appreciated the moment and you acted.  In a busy world always worrying about the next thing, it takes energy to slow things down and record the moment. Very few of us are real photographers and too few of us take meaningful snapshots: congratulations and thank you to those who do!

We at PhotoFixRestore are in our 5th decade of a lifelong love affair with photos.  And loving something, we are driven to take care of it; we are passionate about making old photographs everything that they can be.  Whether it is our photos or yours we love photos - let us count the ways.
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The Story Behind the Photo: Los Angeles Fire Department Portrait

1/5/2017

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This young man made his parents very proud graduating from the Los Angeles Fire Academy back in the 1970s.  They had this portrait on their wall for many years - until clumsy Dad brushed past it and knocked it to the ground.  The accident caused the glass to break (and recriminations from Mom) and the photo became torn and scratched from the glass shards. There is a piece completely missing at the bottom.  But luckily the photo was fixable.

On closer inspection, it emerged that the photo restoration and photo repair issues were not confined to the scratches and tears. There was also faint orange spotting across the photo caused by imperfect washing of the chemicals when the photo was first developed.  And, the photo had become faded over time - and some color had been drained away. For a certain generation of photos the cyan (blue) ink is the first to fade.  In some case the loss is so extreme the photo looks red. Here the loss was less serious.
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Before going to work restoring the photo we did some research on Los Angeles Fire Department uniforms and insignia of the period.  We learned that the unform is a dark blue, the tie is black, and the insignia is gold.  With that information we went to work and produced this restoration. The work required the surface repairs as well as some hand coloring - including the lips which had become light and slightly off-color.

Once the photo repair was done we sent this "before and after" preview to the client who gave us their approval to go ahead and print.  Since the original was an 8" x 10" glossy that is the photo we made for them.  In addition, we delivered a digital print that can be shared and even reprinted!
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What Our Photo Repair and Photo Restoration Clients Are Saying About Us...

"Your work is beautiful. You are the sweetest lady! Thanks so much." Kathleen G

"Our preferred photo restorers." Chemers Gallery

"You have been a treat to work with!"   Sue E.


"The images are beautiful and we are excited to proceed. We appreciate your excellent customer service." City of RSM

"You did such a beautiful job.  My daughter was sooo happy with it."  Diane A.
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  • Home
    • About Us
    • Gallery
    • Testimonials, Reviews and FAQs
    • Firms Trusting Us
  • Photo Repair
  • Photo Restore
  • Colorizing Photos
  • Contact
  • Nation-Wide
  • The PFR Blog
  • Photo Editing
  • DIY Photo Resizing
  • DIY Photo Scanning
  • Additional DIY Resources
  • Testimonials & Reviews
  • FAQs