05 October 2024, 07:03
Michael RobinsonOld Photos
What is the best way to scan old photos so as to create good, high-quality digital images?
Thanks for helping a guy who wants to save some 70+ year old photos of his gramps.

06 October 2024, 03:25
richja scan will not be better than the original, but you can touch up any problems with the original.
Now if you have negatives that is a different story.
This is a brother 3 in 1 printer scanner. Took an hour to do this to 1 picture.
07 October 2024, 19:10
Michael RobinsonNice job!
TIme-consuming, but great result.
If I may ask, what photo retouching program did you use?
07 October 2024, 19:21
richjGIMP on the PC it is free and somewhat like photoshop
11 October 2024, 04:10
Michael RobinsonThanks. I will give it a try.
16 October 2024, 04:05
300H&HRichj did a great with touch ups. Surface damage will always require tedious work digitally.
He has more patience than me! I'm the family archiver, so I usually just scan, do a bit of color correction, etc.
The earliest were from around 1906, with quite a few from the late 20s. Overexposure was something I never figured out. I'm not sure there's a viable solution that doesn't ruin it like plastic surgery.
Either way, scanning it means that you've created a digital image that can be shared and saved for many. Having gone through photos that haven't been seen by any for decades, sometimes I imagined them all being lost...
It also gave me an appreciation for choosing moments.
22 October 2024, 15:09
Michael RobinsonI am finding the GIMP program difficult to use. It isn’t intuitive, at least to me.
I dread doing it, but I guess I will have to buckle down and study the user guide.

25 October 2024, 03:18
richjMike
I probably don't even use %25 of the features of gimp. It is a PITA