There are many ways and methods to restore posters and this was a different one to me. One size doesn’t fit all so to speak. This was a terrific and very suitable method to this poster keeping the age and its paper tactile quality. Great job!
@@ChristianC-gy1ym Not really, more of a dedicated hobbyist. I was in the UK late last year for a vintage poster market in Peckham. I’m a decorative painter in Australia but I have learned linen backing and paper restoration via RUclips. I have done hundreds of posters along the line of the stretched canvas, paper then poster approach. I haven’t done the Japanese paper technique as yet so to see this more delicate approach was fascinating. Cheers!
Definitely an improvement but based on the videos I've seen from Fourth Cone Restoration, I think some of that discoloration could be removed more and the poster creases would disappear with a right linen backing.
It isn't cheap and this persons initial price plus the person in the museum who gave it a final price comes out to him getting to the 1400 pound if not more restored price all paid. So he isn't making any money anytime soon. You only do this because you love it so much and the price to replace vs's the price to restore it offset each other. Very few posters bring upwards of $3,000 to $5,000. Like everything else condition is everything. A restored poster of something like the Forbidden planet, The day the earth stood still or any of the early monster posters would be exceptions because nobody really collected those. These guys do a phenomenal job and show a lot of the process, so it's a pretty involved process. Time = money. ruclips.net/video/mzfncFTb6SU/видео.html
@@johnwayne2103 Thanks. A bit more than. I figured, but then again I doubt he shopped around for price. But I knew it wouldn't be cheap. The frame alone is probably $400+ and I was guessing $800 for the restore.
What the hell was the point of this if you're not going to show the full process? The creases still being so obvious means this was not done properly. If he bought for £500 and sold for @ £1500 then he made nothing. The "expert" with the exhibition has no idea what he's talking about.
She did not do a good job. There are better methods for poster conservation. This should have been washed/bleached to brighten the paper. Not just sprayed/blotted. Then it should have been linen backed which would have eliminated the creases. Then the restoration could take place and all the missing parts filled in with paper pulp and colored over with inks to match.
True.. but they were mostly folded many yrs ago and sent to cinemas like that... I have a few that had to be linenbacked to take out the folds... at the time they probably didnt think they'd be worth money in the future
Subscribe to Quest TV for more great clips: bit.ly/3Womgne
The force is strong with this one.
think I bought a leather recliner from Saxon years ago from his shop Metro retro, still got it today what a dude
There are many ways and methods to restore posters and this was a different one to me. One size doesn’t fit all so to speak. This was a terrific and very suitable method to this poster keeping the age and its paper tactile quality. Great job!
Cute comment. It was a... "different one to you"? Hmm, I guess you're an expert.
@@ChristianC-gy1ym Not really, more of a dedicated hobbyist. I was in the UK late last year for a vintage poster market in Peckham. I’m a decorative painter in Australia but I have learned linen backing and paper restoration via RUclips. I have done hundreds of posters along the line of the stretched canvas, paper then poster approach. I haven’t done the Japanese paper technique as yet so to see this more delicate approach was fascinating. Cheers!
@@rodneyashton8742 Noted 🙂
@@ChristianC-gy1ym
He just Whooped your arse 😂😅
Definitely an improvement but based on the videos I've seen from Fourth Cone Restoration, I think some of that discoloration could be removed more and the poster creases would disappear with a right linen backing.
The 1997 Remaster I was in. 1 of 4 Stormtrooper's. Thank's George and all.
Amazing beautiful job 👍👍👍 you truly truly truly have the Force with you
incredibly talented!👍
amazing
I have the exact same poster and I've been interested in having it restored. Not sure how much it would cost though.
It isn't cheap and this persons initial price plus the person in the museum who gave it a final price comes out to him getting to the 1400 pound if not more restored price all paid. So he isn't making any money anytime soon. You only do this because you love it so much and the price to replace vs's the price to restore it offset each other.
Very few posters bring upwards of $3,000 to $5,000. Like everything else condition is everything. A restored poster of something like the Forbidden planet, The day the earth stood still or any of the early monster posters would be exceptions because nobody really collected those.
These guys do a phenomenal job and show a lot of the process, so it's a pretty involved process. Time = money.
ruclips.net/video/mzfncFTb6SU/видео.html
@@johnwayne2103 Thanks. A bit more than. I figured, but then again I doubt he shopped around for price. But I knew it wouldn't be cheap. The frame alone is probably $400+ and I was guessing $800 for the restore.
Oh dear Professional Conservation this is not. Its not even flattened. Hello Julian!
These kind of posters are folded. So it’s not supposed to be completely flat.
It’s quoted too low. Not even close. It’s a giant size. I have an original normal sized one that’s worth $2,500. That poster is $5,000 easy
Use the force but not too much.
What the hell was the point of this if you're not going to show the full process? The creases still being so obvious means this was not done properly. If he bought for £500 and sold for @ £1500 then he made nothing. The "expert" with the exhibition has no idea what he's talking about.
❤❤❤
@BaumgartnerRestoration, thats all I have to say.
He doesn't do paper restoration
@@anthonyparkinson4517PosterFix and Fourth Cone Restoration would be the ideal choices.
She did not do a good job. There are better methods for poster conservation. This should have been washed/bleached to brighten the paper. Not just sprayed/blotted. Then it should have been linen backed which would have eliminated the creases. Then the restoration could take place and all the missing parts filled in with paper pulp and colored over with inks to match.
Couple of sado
The lesson of this story is to never fold the posters, you must roll them up.
True.. but they were mostly folded many yrs ago and sent to cinemas like that... I have a few that had to be linenbacked to take out the folds... at the time they probably didnt think they'd be worth money in the future