Photoshop Restoration Tutorials
Colorizing & Repairing an Old Damaged Photo
| This is a continuation of this tutorial or image
restoration in progress. Here I’m going to show you a simple but effective technique that will help you ‘smooth out’ areas while also ‘colorizing’ them. Oftentimes old photos will still have some color to them that you can use if they’re not black and white and doing this can help restore their original integrity. Create a new blank layer first by clicking on the new layer icon and then choose Color (or Hue) as the blending mode.
For this you’ll mostly stay on your paintbrush tool and press Alt to temporarily bring up the eyedropper/turkey baster from which you can continue to collect a new sample by clicking to get a new foreground color from which you can continue to paint with.
When restoring photos remember that you’ll have to take more time
when working on actual people to get them just right whether you’re
cloning, healing, or using this method of restoring color. On
backgrounds you can work a lot faster and they don’t matter as much
but on a real restoration job you’ll want to take your time to get
the (everything) color in this case just right.
Continue to Alt click when on the brush to paint in areas that should have a certain color, always resampling when you go to another area. This will not only colorize the image but smooth out a LOT of image wear and inconsistencies found with older images.
Carefully use the clone stamp tool (taught in other tutorials and my Photo Restoration video training) to repair pixels. This can be used to correct blocky pixels also.
Once again, restoration is a time-consuming task but knowing what to do is important in making the most of your time and putting the care that you want to into restoring your images for loved ones (or loved clients) is worth the effort when you can operate smoothly within Photoshop). Remember to create a duplicate copy of the original image anytime that you want to actually change pixels such as cloning
(unless you want to use all layers and clone onto a blank layer).
You can see this tutorial in realtime in action on my
Photo Restoration
& Curves DVD.
Here I’m continuing to sample using the brush tool on my Color or
Hue blending mode layer and painting over it to smooth out the
colors.
Images like this that haven’t been scanned properly or are just too damaged you can carefully get rid of these lines by using the clone stamp tool.
There’s nothing quite like seeing an old image come back to life the way it was originally captured (actually there is but I’m pretty young so I can’t fully respect it AS much as some of you b/c it’s not MY favorite genre but at least I admit it../.photo restoration is a very important genre of digital imagery and Photoshop gives you the tools..I give you the knowledge...you have the TLC).
Here I’m sampling the yellow of the dress and painting that in
and...
Try changing the blending mode to hue and see the slight
difference.
Try sampling another color if it’s in the image to colorize or change/add colors to the drapes (in this case). This is how to colorize old photos using this technique and it’s all in the blending mode so you retain the original texture of the image without just painting COLOR onto it.
Note I’ve created another new separate layer to do this colorizing on of the pillar.
To find out a lot more about photo restoration in Photoshop click here. |
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