Archive for October, 2011

Photo Restoration and Retouching Books I LOVE!

Apart form one short  course back in 2000, I am completely self taught when it comes to Photoshop. I learnt from necessity when I was teaching in high schools, staying just one step ahead of my tech savvy students. It wasn’t until I started my business and in particular restoring photographs that I realised how little I knew about this amazing program.

It was a series of books which taught me most of what I knew about Photo Restoration during those early days.  Of course I have learnt a great deal since then…..I am always learning.   Each new image introduces a new challenge.

I am often asked which books I would recommend  to those wishing to learn how to restore photographs.

This snapshot shows just a few of the Photoshop restoration and retouching books I love  they just happen to be available from my Amazon store as well.   All books in my store ship from Amazon in the US.  You may be surprised at just how affordable they are, even with shipping.

Photoshop books I love

By far the best restoration book I have ever read is Katrin Eismann’s “Photoshop Restoration and Retouching”. (Note the numerous yellow ‘post it’ tabs on the copy I first learnt from).  The most recent version is now a few years old.  It was written for CS2 however the content still applies to more recent versions of Photoshop (and even Photoshop Elements).  You can even download the images Katrin uses in her lessons so you can complete the very comprehensive, step by step tutorials in the book.

Katrin’s Photoshop Masking and Compositing book is equally as impressive.

Another fantastic restoration book in my collection is Ctein’s, “Digital Restoration from Start to Finish”.  This is a more ‘technical’ book which outlines all aspects of copying, restoring and archiving your images.  I recently attended a webinar where he explained some of the techniques he demonstrates in his book.  Since then I have adopted new processes in my restoration workflow, especially applying to colour correction.

I also like Scott Kelby’s books, in particular one of his recent offerings, “Professsional Portrait Retouching Techniques for Photographers using Photoshop” and Matt Kloskowski’s recent publication, “Photoshop Compositing Secrets “.  All books are jammed full of step by step tutorials and  screenshots to assist the reader.  I should note that Scott Kelby’s retouching book is aimed at Photographers, not high-end photo retouchers.  His techniques are designed to enable productive workflow to photographers who do not have hours to spend on a single image.  He has a huge collection of books, all of which I find very easy to read.  He writes, just as he would speak.

With each new version of Photoshop or Photoshop Elements new books arrive on the scene.  I usually add them to my Amazon store as I hear about them but I cannot claim to have read them all.  The books listed above are books I own and can recommend.

Have you stumbled upon any great restoration or retouching books?




Digital Photography: It’s Child’s play

Yes, Literally!  Child’s play.

I needed a few texture images  yesterday for an editing project so grabbed my camera and ran outside to take a few shots   My four year old daughter followed with the Dora The Explorer camera she received for Christmas last year.  This particular camera won’t win any prizes for it’s picture quality but it sure does make photography fun for my little girl, especially when she is congratulated by Dora after each shot for doing such a fantastic job;  ”Fantastico!”

It wasn’t long before I completely forgot about finding interesting textures and instead pointed my camera at my little photographer who was closely studying the colourful spring blooms in our front yard.  She tried different camera angles and even switched from shooting landscape format to portrait format.  I was most impressed with her concentration and determination to find the best angle.

We ventured back inside and uploaded our images.  A short while later in Photoshop  and voila!  a cute keepsake to hang on her wall.

ps.  Yes, there is a bit of interpolation happening with her lovely flower images.  That’s what you get when your Dora camera shoots at 640 x 480 pixles. :)

Digital Photography: It's Child's play

Photography by Evelyn and Carol Heath





Matthew and Lisa’s Wedding

There are some amazing wedding photographers out there.  I am not one of them. :-?

Early in my career I worked as a portrait photographer and whilst I still shoot some portraits, I find myself mostly in front of the computer screen editing images for other photographers or photographing products.  But when my niece rang and asked for a favour earlier this year, I simply couldn’t say no and soon found myself offering to photograph her wedding.  I have shot a few weddings and after each occassion I do recall saying, ‘never again’ but I guess I am just a sucker, especially when it comes to family.

Lisa and Matthew celebrated their wedding at Echidna Gully near Armidale in NSW,  a beautiful setting in spectacular gorge country.

Whilst kept busy on the day, I  felt honoured to be able to share the day so intimately with Lisa and Matthew.

Here are a few of my favourite pics from the day.




A touch of colour to brighten your day

I don’t remember when I first fell in love with photography but I do know it was at a very early age.

There are a few photos that I remember fondly from my childhood.  One of them is my parents’ wedding photograph which originally hung on the lounge room wall of the family home but was later moved to the writing desk.  It is still there today, mounted in a simple white frame.  My parents make a handsome couple;  my mother  in her long, lacey wedding dress and veil and my father in a dark suit.  The two bridesmaids wore a soft pink and a baby blue, full length 1950’s style dresses.  Their bouquets were pink.  Another is an aerial photograph taken of my grandfather’s property near Walcha in NSW.  The roof of the house is quite a bright red and the paddocks are a lush green.  This photograph still hangs in the entrance hall of my Aunt and Uncle’s house.

Both of these photographs were hand coloured.  Perhaps this is why I have such fond memories of them?  I remember thinking how lovely it was that they were photos, but they were also like paintings.  The colouring of the aerial photograph is rather crude and looks a little rushed.  It is probably also likely that the paddocks were not as lush and green as represented in the photograph, but it is still a great image.

It wasn’t until I went to Uni that I really fell in love with hand coloured photographs.  One of my lecturers, Miranda Lawry, was skilled in the craft (along with book binding) and I admired artists such as Robyn Stacey, Micky Allan and Kate Breakey who took this traditional art medium and employed similar techniques in their contemporary exhibition images.   I even wrote my final year research paper on “The Art of Hand Colouring”  and created three children’s books featuring hand coloured photographs for my final year exhibition.

So, did I mention that I LOVE hand coloured photographs?

Today when I ‘hand colour’ a photograph, I use Photoshop and my ‘I can not live without’ Wacom tablet instead of my trusty Marshall’s oils and pencils which are safely stored somewhere in the garage, but the technique I use for colouring an image today is not unlike the technique I used twenty something years ago.  I apply my colour, adjust the opacity of that colour and build layers of colour to achieve the desired result.   There is no smell of oil paints or thinning solution or endless cotton buds littering my desk.  Just my computer and trusty Wacom tablet.

I recently had a client send a photo through for restoration.  It is a charming  photograph taken in 1962 of six year old Margaret, dressed for a special event at the South Bundaberg Primary School in QLD.  As soon as I saw this image I wanted to colour it.  Yes, it looks great as a black and white image, but those candy stripes were just begging to be coloured red.  Margaret agreed and this is the end result.

hand coloured image by Carol Heath, Pixel By Pixel

Thank you Margaret for allowing me to share.  I thoroughly enjoyed working on this image;  not a difficult one at all to restore but such a glorious image.

Hand colouring (otherwise known as colourisation) is just one topic taught in my Photo Restoration courses.