Assignment 1 / Restoration

Due: 6/25

 

project image example: image example

What To Turn In:

You will turn in a total of 6 images
1 printed and mounted image (8.5" x 11" @ 300ppi, mounted on mat board)

Place all images in a folder called:

lastname_a1

How to name your files:

lastname_scan.tif
lastname_restore.psd
lastname_tint.psd
lastname_paint.psd
lastname_tile.psd

lastname_a1_print.tif

 

Selecting an image:

Please bring at least 2 black and white images to class. These need to be prints, not negatives. And they need to be black and white - or sepia toned, and not full color. The degree of damage needs to also be manageable. Please do not select an image where half the face of the subject is missing. That will be far too difficult for you to correct. If the paper has a deep texture, please avoid working with it. If you have any questions, bring the image in to class and ask me.

If you would rather scan the images at home (preventing further damage by bringing them to class), you are welcome to do so. Please refer to the following scanning specifications. Save the scanned image to a USB drive and bring to class.

Choose 1 to work with.


Scanning Specifications:

Scan your images in RGB color mode.
300 dpi / ppi
with the output size at 8.5" x 11" (target size)
the number of pixels will be about 2400 x 3000

Your original image may be larger or smaller than 8"x10". Simply adjust your Target Size to fit the above specified parameters.

Format: TIF, No Compression, click "windows" option

Name your scan as: lastname_scan_001.tif

 

In Photoshop:

This image will be saved as: lastname_scan.tif
Rename with SAVE AS: lastname_restore.psd

Rename (double-click) the background layer as: original
Create a copy of that layer (cmd j), rename: restore
Lock the original layer to prevent making changes to it.
Begin your restoration process on the new copied layer.


Restoring:

On the "restore" layer: All stamping and healing tools will be used on this layer.

You will work with adjustment layers: Black & White (to remove color)
Curves (at the end of your work-flow, to increase white or black, mids, or contrast)

Save to update any changes.


Color:

Open the file: lastname_restore.psd

Save As: lastname_tint.psd (uncheck the "Layers" box)

Open the file you just saved: lastname_tint.psd

Before you start adding color, check to see if your image has been flattened.
Do you see just one layer?
If yes, then you are now ready to add color to your photo.
If no, then you will have to flatten the image file from the Layers menu.

Apply one color to the image (2 colors max)

Use any of the following techniques: B&W adjustment layer, Hue/Saturation adjustment layer, Color Fill adjustment layer / Blend Mode (or Layer Style - Color Overlay / Blend Mode)

 

Painting:

Open the file: lastname_restore.psd

Save As: lastname_paint.psd (NO LAYERS - uncheck the "layers" box)

Open: lastname_paint.psd

Before you start adding color, check to see if your image has been flattened.
Do you see just one layer?
If yes, then you are now ready to add color to your photo.
If no, then you will have to flatten the image file from the Layers menu.

Double Click the background layer and rename: restored (lock this)
Choose a color from the swatches or color picker. Then select an adjustment layer for "solid color" or "color fill". Invert the mask (in the mask panel or with cmd i. You should see that your mask has changed from white to black). Select a paint brush with a 0% hardness edge (very soft) and paint with white so that the color is revealed in your image (you are painting on the mask using white / revealing the adjustment)

Name all Color Layers

When the color is completed, place color layers in groups. (a group is the folder icon. a quick method: click on the top layer, hold the shift key - click on the last color layer. then click the folder icon in the layers panel. All of the selected layers should have been "grouped" together).
You need at least 1 group. You could have more that organizes color layers based on either a face, or clothing, or background.


Creating Tiled Images:

This process can be achieved using Bridge

All 4 images (scan, restore, tint, paint) will be combined into one 8.5" x 11" @ 300 ppi

Use Bridge: Menu Bar > Tools > Photoshop > Contact Sheet II
Layout: image placement: across first (by row), columns 2, rows 2, Use Auto-Spacing
(Layers: if you want to move anything around or transform, keep Layers)

It is your option if you use the file name or not. I will show you how to use your own text instead: "original", "restored", "one color tint", "custom full color"

Save as: lastname_tile.psd (option: to save as layers with text)

 

Print:

LINK to the Print Workflow instructions

Choose 1 digital image from all of the images that you worked on for image #1.
Take this selected image file through the "print work-flow".
Save this image as: lastname_a1_print.tif (no layers, no compression).

Print this final image to a Canon Ink Jet printer. 8.5" x 11" @ 300 dpi, Adobe RGB color

Mount this print on 11" x 14" board using the hot press method.
LINK to the Mounting instructions

Print on the Laser printer: the Scan file / OR the Original Restore Layer. This is considered a "Proof" and is a free print. Print your name with pen or pencil in the bottom right corner of the Proof print.

Hang both images (side-by-side) in the Hallway for display.

 

 

What To Turn In:

You will turn in a total of 6 images
1 printed and mounted image (8.5" x 11" @ 300ppi, mounted on mat board)

Place all images in a folder called:

lastname_a1

How to name your files:

lastname_scan.tif
lastname_restore.psd
lastname_tint.psd
lastname_paint.psd
lastname_tile.psd

lastname_a1_print.tif


 

Restoration Links

examples:

examples of restoration of severly damaged photos on Peta Pixel


Reddit users colorizing old photos
:
on Petal Pixel blog
on Reddit

tutorials: (not mine)
step by step colorization method

on Peta Pixel - more links about the above tutorial and its contibutor

Video

How obsessive artists colorize old photos

Artist Links (examples)

Jordan Lloyd - (instagram)
Mads Madsen
Marina Amaral
Dana Keller
Patty Allison