Archive for January, 2009
Over 100 positive reviews!
A big thank you to all of you for posting your reviews on FreeIndex. You have now posted over 100 positive reviews showing how much you appreciate our photo repair services. A special thank you and congratulations goes to Mr Richard Haskell from Hertfordshire who receives a FREE grade 2 photo restoration as he placed our 100th review!
See your latest photo restoration reviews!
Thanks again to you all!
Image-Restore
Photo Repair not exactly
Rather off topic of photo repair today, but still interesting and to do with Photoshop, I have been entering PhotoShop talent Competitions, you can see my entries below. I have had 2 seconds and one 4th place so far. I am now hooked so keep looking for more entries.

4th place – created from a stack of cups and a Bonsai tree

2nd place winner – frost and deer and extra sun rays added to a woodland scene.
EDIT: PhotoshopTalent website has now been renamed pxleyes, so please visit Neil Rhodes photo art portfolio for all my entries. Check back regularly to see more entries
Very old, board based black and white photos
I have been restoring a fair few black and white photos on fibrous cardboard recently. This type of photo seems to have had the light sensitive emulsion painted onto the board and then exposed to light. I would suggest that such large sizes of paper could not be made so the photographer simply grabbed a stable matt cardboard base and painted on the chemicals. The resulting image is a very soft focused photo without any hard defined edges.
With this photo board it has a matt finish and absorbs moisture very well. If you have any very large old photos, perhaps stored in the loft, still in a frame in a plastic bag, please dig them out and put the somewhere dry and warm before they suck up the moisture in the cool damp air, circulating around your loft. As they do this they swell a little and often grow mould of varying types. The fine black soot-like mould and dry white, spidery feather-like mould, possibly mildew. Neither of these do your photos any good, its best to dry them out slowly and then dust them off very lightly with a soft artist’s paint brush. Once the worst is off, use a little photographer’s canned air to blow away the spores, but do this outside otherwise they will just settle in the house and not too close to the photo either.
Once it’s all clean get your photo restoration done. The process of degradation is already happening and there is not a lot you can do to stop it!