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Achieving that vintage look, via PhotoShop

Jerekson

One Too Many
Messages
1,620
Location
1935
How do you guys do it?

What are methods for making a digital photograph look antique? (with photoshop)
 

Dinerman

Super Moderator
Bartender
Messages
10,562
Location
Bozeman, MT
I pop mine in B&W and up the contrast. Nothing identifiably modern in the picture helps too.

vintage looking, no?
 

happyfilmluvguy

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,541
Dinerman said:
I pop mine in B&W and up the contrast. Nothing identifiably modern in the picture helps too.

vintage looking, no?

I want to see what that second photo looked like before you turned it into a graphic novel. :D
 

StanleyVanBuren

Registered User
Messages
409
Location
Pacific Palisades, CA
OK, so I had to do a few of these myself.

Mine don't have thumbnails though so bear with me...

bw_1.jpg

If I just wasn't wearing sneakers/trainers, I think I could pull this one off.


bw_2.jpg


bw_3.jpg

Modern-day London, but the look of the original taxi helps.

bw_4.jpg

This one would have been great if someone hadn't ruined their Mini with modern hubcaps.

bw_5.jpg

Perhaps this should be the banner for all FL events?

bw_6.jpg
 

thebadmamajama

Practically Family
Messages
564
Location
Good ol' Midwest
I know I'm quite a dunce when it comes to Photoshop know-how, but I'm an artist and catch on quickly. Tell me, how do you cut figures (say, two people) out of a photo and replace those figures onto another photo (say, a vintage photo)?

Thanks for the help! The photos posted on here so far are magnificent! :eusa_clap
 

Maj.Nick Danger

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,469
Location
Behind the 8 ball,..
thebadmamajama said:
I know I'm quite a dunce when it comes to Photoshop know-how, but I'm an artist and catch on quickly. Tell me, how do you cut figures (say, two people) out of a photo and replace those figures onto another photo (say, a vintage photo)?

Thanks for the help! The photos posted on here so far are magnificent! :eusa_clap
You first have to select the area of the image,(people) you want to move to a different background. There are several different ways to do this. I find that the easiest method is to use the extract filter. When you select this filter from the drop down menu, it allows you to outline any part of an image you want with a high lighter, then you extract that part and make it into another layer.
Next open your background photo and make any modifications you need to make. You can then simply drag the extracted image over to your background and drop it on. If you don't like it, click edit, and undo it. You will most likely have to scale the extracted image to fit onto your background. To do this, click on image, then image size on the drop down menu, then change the size.
Hope this helps and doesn't confuse you. :eek: But it is hard to explain something like this without the visuals.
 

Dalexs

Practically Family
Messages
569
Location
Just 'nath of Baston
I always start with removing a big chunk of them and place over a transparent background.

Repeat after me... Magic wand is your friend. Use that next.

Smudge tool set to a VERY light setting helps merge them into the background much more convincingly.

Google "photoshop tutorials." There are a ton of talented people out there who willingly share their techniques.

Dalexs
 

Leading Edge

One of the Regulars
Messages
181
Location
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Dalexs said:
I always start with removing a big chunk of them and place over a transparent background.

Repeat after me... Magic wand is your friend. Use that next.

Smudge tool set to a VERY light setting helps merge them into the background much more convincingly.

Dalexs


:eusa_doh: It is the magic wand (not the eraser) that I used to clear out the background. Once you've got that transparent background, you can do whatever you want.

I never used the smudge tool AND I look forward to playing around with it. It sounds very useful for disrupting that "artificial" look.

Thanks, Dalexs :)
 

CharlieH.

One Too Many
Messages
1,169
Location
It used to be Detroit....
Not just black and white...

Sometimes I make my pictures look like they were taken on an old colour process -

autochrome.jpg

This one's meant to looke like an Autochrome plate from the 1900's. I added plenty of grain in the individual colour channels to give it the autochrome's characteristic pointillism look.

fadedEktachrome.jpg

To make it look like a faded slide, I reduce saturation and add a red tint.


twostriptechnicolor.jpg

This is intended to recreate two-strip Technicolor. I simply replace the blue channel with the green channel, and add a little yellow tint to compensate for missing tones, as was sometimes done on the films

Tuxcut.jpg

Finally, this one's meant to look like an early colour print. I did the same as with the Technicolor picture, only played a little more with hues and tints to get these results.
 

thetankw/ahat

Familiar Face
Messages
63
Location
san diego
in psp 11 there's an effect called time machine. it's really cool i did these with it.

this is the original photo
aged12.jpg

here is one called daguerrotype. says its the first popular for of photography.
aged12d.jpg

this is early color aka autochrome.
aged12autochrom.jpg

theres some other on there that i played with but it didnt look good with the pic.
 

Private Eye

New in Town
Messages
26
Location
Los Angeles, circa 1940
Fun with filters

Don't forget to experiment with Film Grain, Spatter, and Noise under the Filter menu.
Mandrake.jpg
MarloweWash.jpg
OfficerOHara.jpg
OfficerOHaraDuo2.jpg


It's all experiments until you find the look you like. These examples don't work to my satisfaction yet, but I whipped them together to show some filter variation.
 

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