Restoring Your Family Photos

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  • čas přidán 29. 08. 2024
  • Learn how to use computer programs to restore your family photos through repairing rips, tears, mould marks, scratches, writing, fading, straightening, and face enhancement.
    Bradley Pierson highlights helpful products for restoring your family photos and gives viewers a tutorial of how to use photo editors to improve the quality and colour of old images!
    This presentation was part of RootsTech Connect 2021. Find hundreds of free family history classes, keynotes, and more. familysearch.me...
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    RootsTech is hosted by FamilySearch, a global nonprofit organization dedicated to creating inspiring family discovery experiences. RootsTech is the premier global event and learning resource for making family connections and receiving guidance to help people learn more about their families.
    FamilySearch is an international, nonprofit organization dedicated to helping people all over the world connect with their family: past, present, and future. Our partnerships with thousands of record custodians and major genealogical organizations allow us to make billions of records available for you to research your family tree free of charge! Regardless of where or how you research your ancestry, we have specialists all over the world to help you experience the joy of connecting with your heritage.
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Komentáře • 11

  • @marilyncarlson7097
    @marilyncarlson7097 Před 3 lety +1

    wonderful and simply explained. I've been looking for something simple, yet more advanced than the free software I've been using for about 14 years. It looks really possible to move to a more advanced level of restoring photos. I'm so glad you offered this and that i found it.

  • @DonaldWMeyers-dwm
    @DonaldWMeyers-dwm Před 3 lety +1

    In addition to keeping an original copy of the scan, you should also do your editing on layers if the software permits that, then you don't have to start over again if you make a mistake.

  • @michaelme1548
    @michaelme1548 Před 3 lety

    Except in limited circumstances I am not a fan of the MyHeritage photo enhancement software. Too often enhancement makes them look like a different person.

  • @nicolebrown3433
    @nicolebrown3433 Před 3 lety +2

    Can you say which scanner you showed?

    • @lionheart830
      @lionheart830 Před 3 lety

      Yes, the Scanner name will surely help us too!

    • @dougburgin5912
      @dougburgin5912 Před 2 lety

      Looked just like an Epson Perfection v600 Photo, which comes with the slide adapter he showed.

  • @lionheart830
    @lionheart830 Před 3 lety

    This is wonderful information! Thank you Family Search! Where in Family Search can we remove the blurriness from a photo?

  • @lindajwilson9848
    @lindajwilson9848 Před 3 lety +1

    Without closed captioning I failed to hear many of the words spoken, but became encouraged with the graphics and possibility of doing this with my old photos. Thank you!

    • @michaelme1548
      @michaelme1548 Před 3 lety

      I agree. This should have closed captioning.

  • @eharoldsen
    @eharoldsen Před 3 lety

    Always keep an unmodified copy of your original scan. Ten or twenty years from now, better software might make even greater restorations possible. Be careful about converting old black and white photos to pure black and white. Sometime the original photo was painted to give it color and you don't want to lose it. You might consider making a side by side print with the unmodified image next to the restored image. This is especially useful when working with a ferroplate or tintype photo because these are normally reversed left to right. If I switch them back, I want people to know what I changed.