Photo restoration – how to deal with silvery sheen in parts of image?

G
Posted By
George
Jan 29, 2006
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2453
Replies
5
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Closed
Some 80 year old photos in my possession have an odd haze or sheen over some areas, mostly within a couple centimeters of the edge. The areas mostly affected are dark. Thus the shadow detail is obscured. The haze or sheen is not uniform, but more evident in some dark areas than other dark areas. It seems that areas sullied by fingerprints are less affected.

The photos don’t scan very well. The sheen is quite pronounced.

The angle of light has an effect on the sheen, but I can’t find an angle that gets rid of it satisfactorily to give me a good reproduction (by digital camera).

Any suggestions?

G.

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B
Brian
Jan 29, 2006
George wrote:
Some 80 year old photos in my possession have an odd haze or sheen over some areas, mostly within a couple centimeters of the edge. The areas mostly affected are dark. Thus the shadow detail is obscured. The haze or sheen is not uniform, but more evident in some dark areas than other dark areas. It seems that areas sullied by fingerprints are less affected.

The photos don’t scan very well. The sheen is quite pronounced.
The angle of light has an effect on the sheen, but I can’t find an angle that gets rid of it satisfactorily to give me a good reproduction (by digital camera).

Any suggestions?

G.

Hi George,

do you have an example you can upload to your web space and let us view?
G
George
Jan 29, 2006
On Sun, 29 Jan 2006 15:59:53 +1100, Brian <cooloox_at_optusnet.com.au> wrote:

George wrote:
Some 80 year old photos in my possession have an odd haze or sheen over some areas, mostly within a couple centimeters of the edge. The areas mostly affected are dark. Thus the shadow detail is obscured. The haze or sheen is not uniform, but more evident in some dark areas than other dark areas. It seems that areas sullied by fingerprints are less affected.

The photos don’t scan very well. The sheen is quite pronounced.
The angle of light has an effect on the sheen, but I can’t find an angle that gets rid of it satisfactorily to give me a good reproduction (by digital camera).

Any suggestions?

G.

Hi George,

do you have an example you can upload to your web space and let us view?

I’ve posted it to alt.binaries.photography, alt.binaries.photos, and alt.binaries.picture. (These ngs are not that busy and not that infested with porn.)

The title is Sheen example 1024.jpg.

G.
MR
Mike Russell
Jan 29, 2006
"George" wrote in message
Some 80 year old photos in my possession have an odd haze or sheen over some areas, mostly within a couple centimeters of the edge. The areas mostly affected are dark. Thus the shadow detail is obscured. The haze or sheen is not uniform, but more evident in some dark areas than other dark areas. It seems that areas sullied by fingerprints are less affected.

The photos don’t scan very well. The sheen is quite pronounced.
The angle of light has an effect on the sheen, but I can’t find an angle that gets rid of it satisfactorily to give me a good reproduction (by digital camera).

Any suggestions?

The silver sheen is a common occurrence in old photographs, and results from the migration of free silver radicals within the emulsion. Some of the radicals make their way to the surface, regain their electron, and deposit themselves on the surface as metallic silver.

The silver may be physically removed by rubbing gently with a cloth. You may also use commercial silver polish, but this is considered a high risk procedure, and IMHO is unacceptable treatment for an irreplaceable photograph.
http://www.colinrobinson.com/restore.html

Carefully photograph the image with a digital camera, and isolate the brighter silver areas with a mask, and darken them separately.

Alt.binaries is not accessible to most people. Post an example on a web page somewhere, or email it to Mike AT curvemeister.com and I’ll take a crack at it. I would request your permission to add this to my web site as a tutorial.


Mike Russell
www.curvemeister.com
RF
Robert Feinman
Jan 29, 2006
In article ,
says…
Some 80 year old photos in my possession have an odd haze or sheen over some areas, mostly within a couple centimeters of the edge. The areas mostly affected are dark. Thus the shadow detail is obscured. The haze or sheen is not uniform, but more evident in some dark areas than other dark areas. It seems that areas sullied by fingerprints are less affected.

The photos don’t scan very well. The sheen is quite pronounced.
The angle of light has an effect on the sheen, but I can’t find an angle that gets rid of it satisfactorily to give me a good reproduction (by digital camera).

Any suggestions?

G.
Photos with surface problems don’t scan well. You need to copy the picture with a camera using the standard lighting setup. This is two lights at about 45 degrees to the surface so there are no visible reflections. In really bad cases you need to put polarizers over the lights and a polarizer over the camera lens to eliminate the reflections.
A search on copying or a visit to a library or book store will show you all the details.
If you don’t have too many, a professional service can do this for you.

Robert D Feinman
Landscapes, Cityscapes and Panoramic Photographs
http://robertdfeinman.com
mail:
T
Tacit
Jan 29, 2006
In article ,
George wrote:

Some 80 year old photos in my possession have an odd haze or sheen over some areas, mostly within a couple centimeters of the edge. The areas mostly affected are dark. Thus the shadow detail is obscured. The haze or sheen is not uniform, but more evident in some dark areas than other dark areas. It seems that areas sullied by fingerprints are less affected.

Common problem with old silver-gelatin prints, especially if they were not fixed properly when they were made.

It’s unlikely you will be able to scan the print and get a decent result. The "sheen" you describe is actually elemental silver forming on the surface of the print, and it’s reflective enough that you’ll get poor (and sometimes bizarre) results when you try to scan it.

In the prepress industry, the typical way of dealing with prints like this is to put them in a special "copy stand" with lights around its edge that illuminate the photograph uniformly, and then photograph the print with a horizontal camera. By carefully controlling the lighting, you can reduce the "sheen" considerably; you then make a print from the photograph of the original, and scan that duplicate.

Many print shops and trade shops have the equipment to do this. If the photograph is important and irreplaceable, I would suggest looking for a trade shop or service bureau in your area and having them make a duplicate print for you. (Some custom photo houses can do this as well.) The duplicate will have more shadow detail, and will be easier to scan.

I’ve been told that you can sometimes remove this "sheen" by immersing the print in photographic fixer, which works by dissolving the unexposed silver ions in the emulsion. I have never attempted this and do not know if it works.


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