Quizzes & Puzzles28 mins ago
Paint photographs
5 Answers
I have a nice photograph, a landscape, that appears to be about 60 years old. It has a section across the bottom which has become "silvery", is this just part of the photo process or overexposure to light over the years?
It's a really nice photo, but I think some of the colors (trees and clouds) have been doctored. Was this a normal practice? What is the name of the process of doing this?
Many thanks.
It's a really nice photo, but I think some of the colors (trees and clouds) have been doctored. Was this a normal practice? What is the name of the process of doing this?
Many thanks.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by MargeB. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.When I was a child in the 1950s I had a set of coloured pencils. Also in the set was a bottle of yellow liquid which I would spread over photographs with cotton wool before colouring them with the pencils. I don't know what the liquid was, but the pencils at least were from the Lakeland pencil company of Keswick. I don't think I have any surviving photos, and don't know how they age. Film was black and white in those days, so any colouring has been applied afterwards.
Marge it's called photo tinting. It was done with special inks (which you can still purchase at some craft/art shops). However the effect is now done digitally. Here are examples:
http://www.fostergraphics.com/phototinting.htm
Google also has info about doing it yourself.