Digitizing 60 Years of Family Photos - Share the Memories!

  • Thread starter Ivan Seeking
  • Start date
  • Tags
    Photos
In summary, Ivan is digitizing family photo slides and plans to give them to his parents in a digital photo frame with all sixty years included. The quality of the slides amazed him and he thinks that they will last well upon the first viewing. Other members have shared photos of relatives from different eras which Ivan finds to be more real than modern photos because they are "so textured".
  • #36


Ivan Seeking said:
Heh, not at that resolution!

Just out of curiosity, can anyone name that car - make and model?

Looks like a Studebaker Lark Station Wagon.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #37


S_Happens said:
Looks like a Studebaker Lark Station Wagon.

Bravo!
 
  • #38
I'm definitely not old enough to be the one who should have answered that...
 
  • #39
Hail Ye Old People! :biggrin:
 
  • #40


Astronuc said:
He looks like Clark Kent.

I'll have to tell him that. :smile:

IMG.jpg


Maternal grandfather of said Clark Kent lookalike with the Harry Potter glasses. (My great-grandfather.) This one is circa 1890 something. I scored in the picture collecting department because no one else was particularly interested in my grandmother's photo collection when she passed away.

Oh, and Ivan, congrats on accomplishing such a huge job. Lucky you for not having to scan them all yourself. That would have been an icky labourious job. And thank you for the idea of preserving those memories digitally. It hadn't occurred to me and a lot of my old photos are deteriorating.
 
Last edited:
  • #42


George Jones said:
http://img33.imageshack.us/img33/3019/familyxud.jpg

A (poor quality) picture (from left to right) of one of my sisters, one of my brothers, and me taken in the 60s from the side of the gravel road on which we lived. The picture was probably taken by my oldest brother using an old Brownie,

http://www.brownie-camera.com/.

Is it me or do pictures like these just make you cry? What I mean is the nostalgia and the youth that was there.

Do you guys miss it? I think I do.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #43
Cry? Not. Nostalgia? Sure thing.
 
  • #44
Nice enhancement, Ivan. What did you do?
 
  • #45


FireSky86 said:
Is it me or do pictures like these just make you cry? What I mean is the nostalgia and the youth that was there.

Do you guys miss it? I think I do.
The past was a different time and place. We didn't know much about the wider world and it's troubles - Ignorance is bliss.

But we grow, we learn.

Sometimes I miss the simplicity and more peace and quiet.


My reference is a place on the south coast of Australia looking out over Bass Strait and the Southern Ocean. The small town where I lived had a population of about 200-300 people. I could look north to farms and forest hills beyond the farms. The beaches were not very crowded. When storms passed, I could stand and watch tall waves breaking over the rocks and jetty.
 
  • #46
GeorginaS said:
Nice enhancement, Ivan. What did you do?

I tried a quick color correction and then adjusted the brightness, contrast, and midtones. I don't have anything special; just Microsoft picture manager. Since I've had a bit of practice lately I thought I'd see how well I could clean it up. You may be able to do better by playing with it for awhile.
 
  • #47
I think removing sepia tint is not a good idea - I suppose that's the way the picture looks.

They were all slightly brown 100 years ago :smile:
 
  • #48
Borek said:
They were all slightly brown 100 years ago :smile:

I guess it depends on the purpose. If you want the best pictures possible, clean them up. If you want the color for nastalgia purposes or to give it an old look, leave it be. In my case, I had color slides from 1979 that were turning brown. THAT was not acceptable. In this particular case, it is almost like giving the photographer better equipement. :biggrin: A picture that was never possible!

The point was to show how easily the photos can be enhanced with inexpensive software.
 
Last edited:
  • #50
My first impression was that those photos look like a movie set, Ivan. Very cool. Who went to Tijuana in the 50s and took those pictures?

And yes, Borek, you're right. Those are the colours of the original photograph. Although clean up can make certain improvements to the photos -- as Ivan demonstrated -- I'd keep the original quality of them because their colours and hues are part of the history of them.

I'm a huge fan of old photos, and I'm not sure why. I just like them.
 
  • #51
GeorginaS said:
My first impression was that those photos look like a movie set, Ivan. Very cool. Who went to Tijuana in the 50s and took those pictures?

I think my parents went with the my mother's folks and brothers. Dad took the photos.

I'm a huge fan of old photos

Same here.
 
  • #52
Here are a few that I thought worth a post. First, dad next to his '46 Lincoln [his right]

http://img269.imageshack.us/img269/8967/92274107.jpg

Granpa's Buick - I think it was a '57
http://img404.imageshack.us/img404/3328/125g.jpg

http://img338.imageshack.us/img338/4738/125m.jpg

And a couple that I thought were just good photos:
Granny goofing around with a neighbor [1950 something]
http://img338.imageshack.us/img338/4039/117vw.jpg

Don't know who or when, but somebody from the past hamming it up for the camera. Probably ~1960

http://img338.imageshack.us/img338/2294/121y14.jpg
 
Last edited by a moderator:

Similar threads

  • General Discussion
Replies
2
Views
666
  • General Discussion
Replies
26
Views
1K
Replies
14
Views
1K
  • Science and Math Textbooks
Replies
6
Views
3K
  • General Discussion
Replies
2
Views
1K
  • Art, Music, History, and Linguistics
Replies
23
Views
2K
Replies
12
Views
4K
  • General Discussion
Replies
3
Views
1K
  • General Discussion
Replies
18
Views
6K
Replies
19
Views
4K
Back
Top