Author
Released
1/15/2016- Evaluating and planning the restoration
- Straightening and cropping
- Using the content-aware tools to replace missing details
- Rebuilding arms, faces, and hands
- Using Puppet Warp to recreate photo elements
Skill Level Advanced
Duration
Views
- [Voiceover] Hi. I'm Neil Rhodes, and welcome to Photo Restoration Techniques: Recreating Missing Pieces. Old photos of people are often damaaged and, more often than not, body parts or bits of faces are missing. In this course, we'll be learning how to reconstruct and rebuild missing body parts and faces using Adobe Photoshop. First, we'll take a look at getting started with the right kind of photograph for the rebuilding process. Next, we'll move onto repairing the easier damage in preparation for the trickier repair sections. And we'll finish by finalizing the restore and admiring our handy work.
I hope you're as excited as I am to share this restoration techniques with you. So let's get started.
Related Courses
-
Photo Restoration: Color Casts and Fading
with Neil Rhodes31m 5s Intermediate -
Photo Restoration: Damaged Black-and-White Images
with Neil Rhodes38m 38s Intermediate -
Photo Restoration: Removing Paper Texture
with Neil Rhodes20m 40s Intermediate -
Photo Restoration: Recomposing a Photo
with Neil Rhodes48m 28s Advanced
-
Introduction
-
Welcome39s
-
-
1. Plan the Restoration
-
Evaluate and plan1m 54s
-
-
2. Restore the Easy-to-Fix Damage
-
Repair the jacket and dress11m 18s
-
3. Rebuild Arms
-
4. Rebuild Faces
-
5. Rebuild Hands
-
6. Finalize the Restoration
-
7. Use Puppet Warp as an Alternate Technique
-
Conclusion
-
Next steps51s
-
- Mark as unwatched
- Mark all as unwatched
Are you sure you want to mark all the videos in this course as unwatched?
This will not affect your course history, your reports, or your certificates of completion for this course.
CancelTake notes with your new membership!
Type in the entry box, then click Enter to save your note.
1:30Press on any video thumbnail to jump immediately to the timecode shown.
Notes are saved with you account but can also be exported as plain text, MS Word, PDF, Google Doc, or Evernote.
Share this video
Embed this video
Video: Welcome