Photo Tips and Tricks
Put a ghost in your ghost town photographs...and other easy tips to create cool pictures
- By Helen Starkweather
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2001, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
Web resources
For more information about Polaroid transfer, visit The Light Factory and Polaroid.
Get That Old-Fashioned Look by Hand Coloring Photographs
Before color photography was invented, people took black-and-white photographs and hand colored the prints for dramatic effect. You can achieve that same effect today.
Equipment
Black-and-white prints (preferably with a range of tonal values and few dark areas) on matte or semimatte paper, art pencils or crayons, watercolors, felt-tip pens, oil paints and a container of hot water.
Instructions
Wet the black-and-white print, either by submerging it in water or blotting it well with a damp cloth. Remember to keep the photograph wet throughout the project. Then color the image with art pencils, crayons or felt-tip pens, or with watercolor or oil paints, using brushes, cotton swabs, blotting paper or sponges.
Results
Don't be afraid to experiment. Felt-tip pens create a sharp-lined, dramatic look while watercolors leave behind a soft tint. Crayons give texture. Remember that lighter-colored areas of your photograph will show tinting more clearly.
Web resources
Visit handcolor.com and The Light Factory for hand-coloring materials, additional tips and examples of hand-colored photographs.
Create Surreal Images with Pinhole Cameras
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