How to Repair and Colorize Old Photos (Adobe Photoshop CC Tutorial)

How to Repair and Colorize Old Photos (Adobe Photoshop CC Tutorial)

 


Hey what's up you guys it's Premiere Gal

here and welcome back to my youtube channel here on this channel I make

Premiere Pro tutorials on video editing as well as After Effects tutorials and I

also produce just general video tips and tricks to make you a better video

producer but I like to think of Premiere Pro as my hub right and off of that hub

I have spokes of all the different software I use to achieve my final edit

so I use Photoshop Illustrator Audition a whole bunch of different Adobe

software to achieve my final edit so in this tutorial I'm going to be showing

you how to restore an old photograph in Photoshop and also bring it to life by

colorizing it so this would be a great technique to use if you're producing a

documentary and you have some older photographs that you want to bring to

life after you colorize it you can do

 

The before and after with like a

parallax effect and it's a lot cooler than just using the standard Ken Burns

effect to add motion to still photographs so I have this photo here of

my grandpa from 1950 on his wedding day and I'm going to show you how to restore

it and then colorize it so let's go ahead and jump into Photoshop and I'm

going to give you the play-by-play Hey you guys so I have the image here of my

grandpa inside of Photoshop CC 2017 and I have the first layer here of the

original image called original and what I'm going to do is copy that and hit

command J to copy it and I'm just going to call this by double clicking I'm

going to label that restore because we're going to restore the image here

and get rid of all of these scratches and blemishes that are on the image from

just being old I mean this was from 1950 right so we're going to use a

combination of the patch tool here as

 

Well as the clone tool to get rid of

some of the blemishes here so the first step that I want to do is just crop the

image to get rid of some of the border issues and we can just use the clone

tool to then fit some of the leftover element so let's

just crop first of all and let's just select this area here just to get rid of

some of that torn to fix that and then let's hit the checkmark so now we have

the cropped image and they're still areas that we need to fix let's start in

this upper right hand corner here let's just zoom in here for a second use H for

the hand tool to move it in place so we're going to use the patch tool to fix

this go ahead and select the patch tool and then we're just going to draw a

lasso around this area and then come back and then close it off and then what

we have to do is then click and drag this area down and what it's going to do

is fill the area that we just got rid of

 

With with the selected area just below

isn't that pretty cool so then what we can do is just use the clone tool to fix

that so go ahead and select out of the selection area here and then we can use

the clone tool if you guys have never used the clone tool before it's

generally better to increase the brush size so it's less noticeable and also

keep the opacity a little bit lower to forward like this around 50% it's okay

to go above but let's increase the brush size to about 150 is probably good for

this so what we're going to do is hit alt and click to copy this region and

then we're just going to click over this area to fix it up see it's

looking a little bit better and now we can clone overtop this part as well just

click until it disappears so that corner is done I'm going to do the exact same

method here just sort of cleaning this up so I'm just going to fast-forward

through this bit as I clone

 

So then this area down here gets a

little tricky because of the shaded lightness on the left and the darkness

on the right so what I can do is just quickly reduce the size of the brush

really quickly and fix just these blemishes here but I don't want to clone

all of this because it's going to look kind of funky to sort of have to copy

and it's a lot of work to have to copy the different tones so what I'm going to

do is use the patch tool here and actually draw a lasso around this entire

area like so and then I'm just going to click and move it over to copy the area to the

right and then that's fixed so if you click over it looks pretty good and then

down here we have another issue we can do the exact same thing but first let's

use the clone tool really quickly let's increase the brush size just a tad and

let's go ahead and alt-click that area and let's just get rid of this crease

here by cloning that that looks pretty

 

 Good

great and now let's just get rid of this area here using the patch tool let's

just go ahead and lasso around that area like so and then let's click in move

that over like so and now that's fixed and just to finish this off here I'm

just going to use the clone tool again alt option click and then just click and

cover up and now let me just show you what it looked like before and now after

so there's still a few more blemishes I'm just going to clean up so I'm just

going to fast forward using the clone tool to do that all right so that's looking pretty good

here so now if I click the eye off on the restore layer you can see what it looked

like before if I click it back On you can see that it's nice and cleaned up

now the last bit of restoring that we have to do is actually create a smart

filter to remove any last-minute dust or

 

Scratches from the image so to do that

you first have to right-click on the restore layer and convert to smart

object and then up to filter select noise dust and scratches and here you

can indicate how big you want the radius of the dust to be removed keeping it

around one and two is safe otherwise you'll get some distortion and threshold

we can keep that at thirty just hit OK and that'll get rid of any dust or

scratches in a radius of around two so now that that is done now we need to

neutralize the color tones so to do that first you need to go down to adjustment

layer and select black and white and now the colors are neutralized in black and

white now we need to add some contrast between the white and the blacks in the

image so let's add a levels adjustment layer and then using this graph here for

levels you're going pull in the blacks to make it a bit darker and pull

in the whites like so to have some

 

Contrast so that's looking a lot better

now you can see the lines on the edges a lot better here great so the next step

is to select a color mode we're going to select it to CMYK also smick as some

people say because you're good after you select it you're going to select merge

and it's going to make one layer the reason why we change it to see CMYK is

because not only is it better for printing but it blends better when we

start adding the color so now we're set to begin adding color to this image so

the way that we do that is we actually create a solid color adjustment layer

for each color that we're going to paint on to my grandfather here so we need a

skin color we need an eye color hair color

tuxedo color let's see what else this rest

it's probably like a dark brown color and the background which I don't know

the original color but I'm going to

 

Guess it was probably a gray so let's

start painting so to do that you're going to select this adjustment layer

here it's like solid color and here we just are going to guess on a skin tone

so it'll be a lot darker because we're going to apply a soft light blend mode

so let's do about that and now we're going to change the blend mode to soft

light and then you're going to select this mask here and hit command-i to

convert it to black and this will enable us to start painting in the color which

will appear as a mask in this box so make sure that white is selected because

this enables you to paint and click on the brush tool or hit B and then we can

zoom in hit C to zoom in and for B back to brush we can adjust the brush size to

be a bit bigger and now I can just start painting in that color like so and

notice the overexposed area here on his forehead that is not going to get any

color just because it's overexposed but

 

That's ok and it's just gonna work

out to be seem more natural because in the original image it's also blown out

so then you just go ahead and paint here I'm just going to fast forward as I

finish his face all right so his face skin is starting

to look a bit better you can always change the color by going back over here

clicking on the color and adjusting it until you feel like you get the right

skin tone again we can go back in and add some blush to it as a final touch to

really get that sort of warm skin color so this can be a look feel a little bit

more you know less alive at first cause we can add more

color as a different layer later on but this is pretty good for now so you know

all we have to do now is just continue to carry on and create a new solid layer

like we did before I still have to paint in his hands but let's just go ahead and

make a new first let's go ahead and

 

Rename this to skin color and now let's

go ahead and make a new solid for let's say his eyes a new solid color let's

make the eyes blue because he had blue eyes like so and we're gonna change this

to soft light like before and then click on the white mask and hit command-i on a

Mac its command its control I on a PC and let's rename this eyes and I'm going

to create a new solid color for his tuxedo which will be black change it to

soft light command-I and so I'm just gonna fast forward as I create all the

different layers here all right so I have a layer for pretty

much every color now from background skin color eyes black tuxedo black

tuxedo all the way up to lips and gums and what I'm going to do is just select

the color that I want to start using and start painting so I'm just going to do a

time lapse as I select the color remember you have to select this bit the

mask part to begin painting and then you

 

Just have to hit B for brush control

click to adjust the size and to to the size that you want and then begin

painting so let's just go ahead and start painting his hands here so I'm just adding some blush to his

skin to make it seem more natural here and again it's set at a 35 percent

opacity if I increase that it's going to look like too much right so I'm just

gonna set that and around 40 and it looks perfect

so the blush makes it just seem more natural all right on to doing the eyes

and other parts of the body I'm just going to do a time-lapse here

of this if you make any mistakes at all you can

always switch these colors so now it's a black color and then you can erase what

you've done so I'm just a switch so I'm going to switch back to white to begin

painting again so that's a really nifty

 

Tip I'm just changing the color the

background so it's easier for me to see when I'm painting in I'm not actually

going to keep it blue so now we can change the background

color to anything that we like let's change it back to here this darker gray

color hit okay and now it's time to fill in his tuxedo color let's go ahead and

click that and hit B for brush let's make it a bit bigger and let's begin

coloring that in all right it's almost done here we're

just gonna fill in this armrest here below and then we may be able to do a

before and after let's go ahead and zoom in to this armrest select the color here

we may have to change the color later on and then we have to do the ring and some

touch-ups so let's just zoom in here select the mask and let's make the brush

bigger now let's begin to color this

 

Armrest kind of darker brown color all right let's zoom out here this is

looking pretty good I like it and because there are some blotchy areas

that's just from the original image some of the damage I mean we can clean that

up and I want to make this pant leg just a

little bit darker so what I'm going to do is rather than create a new solid

color I'm going to create a new layer bring this up to the top here and on

this layer I'm just gonna paint black so I'm going to switch back to black here

make the brush a little bit less hardness increase the size a bit say

about there let's make opacity around 61 and then I can just paint black over

this area so it's not as white and it looks more natural and so this is pretty

much done here I think I probably just want to add a bit more color to his skin

so I may click on that color and

 

Probably darken it up a bit actually

lighten it up a bit just to bring more color in let me bring it down that looks

a bit better though he doesn't look so pale and so to pull up a side-by-side

here what it looked like before and after let me just pull this out you can

see here on the left the damage is there it's Sepia tone and on the right it's

coloured and restored so Thanks so much for watching you guys if this video

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