Often when digitising family collections I do see some amazing photos. Recently I digitised a rather beautiful set of wedding photos. Their owner kindly agreed to let me share a few of these beautiful priceless images which she now has captured in a digital form.
Note these have only been enhanced by conversion to their true black and white.
Copyright Carterworks NZ
Wednesday, July 17, 2013
Sunday, June 16, 2013
Creating a photo wall
Like most people we had a collection of photograph frames given to us as presents over the years. After having children I always had the intention of framing some of our family photos and putting these on the wall...
...I read books on hanging artworks to try and give me inspiration.....but getting all the photos together was an ongoing process...... deciding what to hang and how to make the most of the arrangement of the frames my stairwell just got put in the "too hard basket".....
......it just wasn't happening...
Then recently I saw an article in a Your Home and Garden magazine where the owner of a house had just hung a whole lot of white frames on her wall...
some had photos in them ...
some were empty....
The designers reasoning was - I have all these frames - lets just arrange them on the wall to look good and I will fill them as an ongoing project. At last, a solution to my problems! I didn't have to store those old photo frames in a box in the roof anymore - I could just hang them on the wall and over time I would fill them with images of my family.....
...I read books on hanging artworks to try and give me inspiration.....but getting all the photos together was an ongoing process...... deciding what to hang and how to make the most of the arrangement of the frames my stairwell just got put in the "too hard basket".....
......it just wasn't happening...
Then recently I saw an article in a Your Home and Garden magazine where the owner of a house had just hung a whole lot of white frames on her wall...
some had photos in them ...
some were empty....
The designers reasoning was - I have all these frames - lets just arrange them on the wall to look good and I will fill them as an ongoing project. At last, a solution to my problems! I didn't have to store those old photo frames in a box in the roof anymore - I could just hang them on the wall and over time I would fill them with images of my family.....
Hanging our photo frames proved quite a mission, because over the years we had amassed quite a collection....in fact we had nearly 30 frames....fortunately we have a large hallway! I laid all the frames out on the floor and arranged them so they looked balanced. I didn't have one consistent wood colour, or even frame colour ....but my decorating experience has taught me that you can mix different woods together and they will work....and gold and black and silver can complement the wood as well. Using a straight edge, chalk and a spirit level I hung all of them. It took me three days
Now I have a work in progress that I add to as I restore and add to my family photographic collection.
Wednesday, June 12, 2013
Scanning Glass Plate Negatives
Recently I was given a number of glass plate negatives to
scan. Their owner thought they dated
from the late 1800s but wasn’t too sure what the images were as they were difficult to
see. The negatives had been stored away flat in wads of newspaper...
We have a special tray in our scanner that enables us to scan glass plate negatives with the emulsion side uppermost so the delicate emulsion does not need to be in contact with the glass of the scanner - many other scanners cannot do this.
Can you imagine my excitment, these images had not been seen for many years! ....What would we uncover? Below are a couple of images from the collection....
Click to enlarge |
Glass plate negatives require careful handling and storing to avoid damage. To protect these negatives it is best that they are stored vertically on their longest side and in individual archival envelopes. For more advice see http://natlib.govt.nz/collections/caring-for-your-collections/photographs
Copyright Carterworks (NZ)
Monday, June 3, 2013
Hidden information - Neville's Discovery
Some time ago I was asked to restore a small photo of Neville's
father who was a scout in the early 1900s in Wellington. The photo was quite small and faded and was taken in Hay Street, Oriental Bay.
After looking at the print, Neville was surprised to notice an
officer's ranking shoulder of his father's uniform. He said he never realised his father had
obtained that rank as it was not obvious in the original photo.
Copyright Carterworks NZ
Copyright Carterworks NZ
Sunday, May 26, 2013
Early colour photography
Sergey Prokudin-Gorskii |
In 2000 the Library started scanning these images and many have now been restored, using the process of digichromatography. http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/empire/making.html
One of the striking things about these images is the fact they are so real, yet they document a time that we most commonly see in black and white or sepia.
View of Vitebsk taken in 1912 |
Copyright Carterworks NZ
Sunday, May 12, 2013
Retouching Photos the old fashioned way
In the days before Photoshop.....editing photos was an involved process ....everything was done manually....
Labels:
photo editing
,
photo restoration
,
photo retouching
,
photomanipulation
Friday, February 8, 2013
The Nanotechnology of the Daguerreotype
I recently found this interesting article about how early photographs used high tech nanotechnology!
Labels:
daguerreotype
,
early nanotechnology
,
photographic history
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