Finally! Someone explains the proper use of AI. AI does not reduce a restorer's hard work. Ai is the "polish" that enhaces a good restorer's hard work. Nothing replaces the foundation principals of restoration (eg. detailed cloning) or understanding the power of your PS tools. This is pretty much my restoration workflow. Well done!
Thank you so much, friend! Yes, most people think that AI is a complete, "1 click" replacement for manual work, when ideally, they can't do work instead of artist, but they are amazing for final touches!
hello i have an ild image that i am restoring via photoshop. the scarf has no texture and the face also has no pores. i saw the way you addressed the texture in the jacket. i’m going to try that. but the face o in my photo (1890s) no skin texture. i want to add that in. do you think i might be able to use the skin from a modern day image and “graft” it onto my photo in some subtle way?
when you are putting one picture in front of another, to make the both match perfectly do this: select boths layers/go to edit/select auto align layers/ and voila!
This is indeed a real and also realistic in depth workflow which I have rarely seen before. I like how you emphasize some very important details like the pattern of clothes.
Thank you so much, I am happy to know that you love it. All details are important since they create a bigger picture together and these need to be addressed.
well done sir! very clear explanation and super helpful...thanks. I am also working on old family photos and don't completely trust Adobe AI lol but it is usefull
Very good overall. Several times during cloning process tools were changed (eyedropper, paintbrush, etc.) with no explanation. With that being the case, I was not able to learn everything that I could have from watching the workflow.
Thank you so much for watching and for your kind words! I apologize for not explaining the tool changes in detail. I'll make sure to address that in future videos to provide a better learning experience for you.
You are very welcome! Said shortly, I don't think this filter is helpful at all, it causes more distortion then help, so doing it manually is often both faster, and better. There are some other tools and filters, but AI Photo Restoration filter in PS is not good (at least yet)
I have a question, when the picture that I am working on the hair of the person is very damaged, how can I recreate the hair? do I Google "hair texture" like you did when you Googled "suite texture" ? Thank you so much
You can do it but I think it will be extra work and actually, can make the photo look further from the original. I would recommend you to just find hair brushes online, and race on top of the original gotoo trying to stay as close as possible with original hair shape, and then just add it to the restored image. In case if hair is completely blown away by damage, yes, you can Google hair texture and then just warp or properly, or just use AI at these pints ;)
Thank you! I've heard and used both. Remini is kind of in the past right now since there are better tools. Leonardo.ai is a great service for quick and easy use of Stable Diffusion
@@JoseVergaraG thank you for the feedback! I am experienced in Photo Restoration, but not much at teaching, so I am learning as I go, and your critic helps me with future videos :)
@@rememorie You made a great work in that RUclips video. If only you can say in the video what keys are you using or what menu options you selected, will be great for newbies.
Finally! Someone explains the proper use of AI. AI does not reduce a restorer's hard work.
Ai is the "polish" that enhaces a good restorer's hard work.
Nothing replaces the foundation principals of restoration (eg. detailed cloning) or understanding the power of your PS tools.
This is pretty much my restoration workflow.
Well done!
Thank you so much, friend! Yes, most people think that AI is a complete, "1 click" replacement for manual work, when ideally, they can't do work instead of artist, but they are amazing for final touches!
hello i have an ild image that i am restoring via photoshop. the scarf has no texture and the face also has no pores. i saw the way you addressed the texture in the jacket. i’m going to try that. but the face o
in my photo (1890s) no skin texture. i want to add that in. do you think i might be able to use the skin from a modern day image and “graft” it onto my photo in some subtle way?
when you are putting one picture in front of another, to make the both match perfectly do this: select boths layers/go to edit/select auto align layers/ and voila!
Excellent!
Thank you!
This is indeed a real and also realistic in depth workflow which I have rarely seen before. I like how you emphasize some very important details like the pattern of clothes.
Thank you so much, I am happy to know that you love it. All details are important since they create a bigger picture together and these need to be addressed.
totally agree, this video is excellent and very detailed explained
A very nice job. The only addition I would finally add is a little grain.
Thank you. I often do, just forgot to do it in the video 😔
well done sir! very clear explanation and super helpful...thanks. I am also working on old family photos and don't completely trust Adobe AI lol but it is usefull
Glad it was helpful!
Very good overall. Several times during cloning process tools were changed (eyedropper, paintbrush, etc.) with no explanation. With that being the case, I was not able to learn everything that I could have from watching the workflow.
Thank you so much for watching and for your kind words! I apologize for not explaining the tool changes in detail. I'll make sure to address that in future videos to provide a better learning experience for you.
Excelent video, thanks a lot for doing this. Why you didint use neural filters inside Photoshop, specifically Photo Restoration one?
You are very welcome! Said shortly, I don't think this filter is helpful at all, it causes more distortion then help, so doing it manually is often both faster, and better. There are some other tools and filters, but AI Photo Restoration filter in PS is not good (at least yet)
I have a question, when the picture that I am working on the hair of the person is very damaged, how can I recreate the hair? do I Google "hair texture" like you did when you Googled "suite texture" ? Thank you so much
You can do it but I think it will be extra work and actually, can make the photo look further from the original. I would recommend you to just find hair brushes online, and race on top of the original gotoo trying to stay as close as possible with original hair shape, and then just add it to the restored image.
In case if hair is completely blown away by damage, yes, you can Google hair texture and then just warp or properly, or just use AI at these pints ;)
Great job.
Thank you, friend :)
i think you doesn't hear abot remini ai and leonardo ai, you need to try it
Thank you! I've heard and used both. Remini is kind of in the past right now since there are better tools. Leonardo.ai is a great service for quick and easy use of Stable Diffusion
sorry for a beginner you go much too fast
No worries, thank you for the feedback, I am experienced with Photoshop, but new to teaching, so feedback is appreciated!
@@rememorie Same happened to me. The most difficult part is when you create masks in curve adjustments or other kind of adjustmenets.
@@JoseVergaraG thank you for the feedback! I am experienced in Photo Restoration, but not much at teaching, so I am learning as I go, and your critic helps me with future videos :)
@@rememorie You made a great work in that RUclips video. If only you can say in the video what keys are you using or what menu options you selected, will be great for newbies.
@@JoseVergaraG thank you, friend, taking notes for the future videos :)