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Topic: Black & White Photo Recolouring Read 1953 times  

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EDIT: This topic was split off from It's interesting to me.


I spent many an evening dissecting and colorizing this image of Margaret Howe Lovatt. Turns out colorizing water without knowing the environment and a partly submerged naturally grey body isn't very straightforward. But hey, Farbe ist meine Welt.
« Last Edit: 06. January 2022, 19:03:03 by Kolya »
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Jane Birkin at Heathrow terminals on 1. May 1966. She is carrying her handbasket which became an iconic fashion accessoire because of her.
This was rather a quick shot (compared to my previous work on Margaret Howe Lovatt). I spent one evening researching, mainly for the colouring of the Heathrow floor tiling at the time and to find out that Birkin indeed wore a lot of white. The second evening (today) was spent on colourising. 
I think the result is fine. But I still prefer the black and white original and I'm not sure if this picture gains anything from colours.
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You're doing a pretty great job there with those colorizations! These two pictures could easily pass as natively coloured images that where aesthetically stylized in post processing for use in high gloss fashion magazines.
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Thank you, I know my way around photoshop, but I still have a lot to learn about colorization.

6744719c8e84fRocketMan

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I think the result is fine. But I still prefer the black and white original and I'm not sure if this picture gains anything from colours.

This looks like magic to me.  I like it better than the original. 
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Thank you R-Man. Here is some real magic (not mine) with a picture of The Mamas & the Papas.

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Thank you R-Man. Here is some real magic (not mine) with a picture of The Mamas & the Papas.
It's really good but did they forget the tire?

6744719c8edeeRocketMan

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Tire should be black and white?
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Yes, but this particular area looks entirely untouched and all the bright areas like the rims on the tire or the chrome sparkles look too greyish / unsaturated. In fact I would say the chrome parts in the other areas look a little unnatural too but since they are at least less greyish, it can be perceived as an intentional artistic choice. To make it look authentic, I guess it would work wonders to have it reflect a speckle of color, like greenery from the roadside or blue from the sky. And maybe give the rims on the tires a slight tint of dirty yellow. Another thing is the eye of Michelle Phillips. Should be greenish but here it's grey-blueish.
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I agree that the car's chrome and painted areas should reflect some colours. The tire is fine imo. After checking Michelle's eye colour which seems to be a mix of blue and green, I'm not sure they couldn't appear just dark blue in certain light.

6744719c8f20bRocketMan

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I know zero about colourization but aren't you limited to the shades of gray that you start with?  For example if you think the rims should be reflecting the blue in the sky or something wouldn't you see a gradient of gray shades that appear brighter for some reason, indicating that there ought to be a reflection there?  If the shading is flat and not indicative of a reflection, wouldn't it be wrong to add one?  I'm just commenting in general of course, not saying anything about this particular image, but it seems to me that you are stuck with the pixel brightnesses you start with and have to interpolate within that information alone.
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Ok, I give you the eye (no pun intended) but the tire area really looks way off to me and I have never seen a whitewall tyre this grey. They are either clean white or have a brown/yellowish coat of dirt patina on them.

I know zero about colourization but aren't you limited to the shades of gray that you start with?  For example if you think the rims should be reflecting the blue in the sky or something wouldn't you see a gradient of gray shades that appear brighter for some reason, indicating that there ought to be a reflection there?  If the shading is flat and not indicative of a reflection, wouldn't it be wrong to add one?  I'm just commenting in general of course, not saying anything about this particular image, but it seems to me that you are stuck with the pixel brightnesses you start with and have to interpolate within that information alone.

I'm thinking that on the actual "set" (as in being where this picture was taken at that time), there most likely where some glimmers of color in the reflections. It's now the editors' job to recreate that in a believable way somehow. I'm sure there's quite a bit of artistic license involved in the process. I know pretty much nothing about colorization either so I leave it to Kolya to answer your question.
« Last Edit: 06. January 2022, 16:08:54 by fox »
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Yeah, unless you're recolouring work requires historic correctness, there's a bit of artistic license involved. Quite a few people take this way too far, basically guessing colours that would be easily researched. Another common problem is sepiafication. Since brown is kind of every colour people tend to recolour in tans and browns, resulting in a perception of the past as this dreary brown time long ago. Looking at early colour photos is a good cure against that. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sergey_Prokudin-Gorsky
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