I'd recommend posting it to one of the various retouching forums (such
as DPReview)
There are some real wizards out there who I've seen rescue some really
badly damaged photos.
Cheers,
Dave
On 9/25/07, Perry Pellechia <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> John,
> An image like yours with missing or erro
John,
An image like yours with missing or erroneous data is where techniques
like maximum entropy (maxent) or maximum likely hood algorithms are
necessary to reconstruct the missing bits. I have no real experience
or suggestions but if I wanted to fix this image I would start
researching this ar
From: mike wilson
> John Graves wrote:
>
>> Given the number of OT's, I think it ok to add to the mix. Leroy
>> Whitter is my great great grandfather and the person for whom my
>> Grandfather was named. Although everyone who really know my
>> Grandfather called him Roy, a source of great merr
>
> >I'm sure the librarians would *love* to retain paper copies
> indefinitely.
> >Unfortunately in the real world somebody has to pay for all
> that climate
> >controlled storage spage, and what the librarians would like
> to do doesn't
> >come very high on the list of spending priorities.
>
On 23/09/07, John Francis, discombobulated, unleashed:
>I'm sure the librarians would *love* to retain paper copies indefinitely.
>Unfortunately in the real world somebody has to pay for all that climate
>controlled storage spage, and what the librarians would like to do doesn't
>come very high on
Not really, most libraries only keep the paper copies until the microfiche, or
CD, copies come out. In fact many just use an internet service for such things.
Most non-research libraries do not keep much of anything old anymore. Of course
the Library of Congress probably has a couple of original
Climate control was quite rudimentary for most of the last 200 years and
many old newspapers, even those printed on cheap pulp paper in the last
century were still quite readable when they were replaced with microfilm
and microfiche.
John Francis wrote:
> On Sun, Sep 23, 2007 at 10:40:31PM +010
On Sun, Sep 23, 2007 at 10:40:31PM +0100, mike wilson wrote:
> John Graves wrote:
>
> > Mike,
> >
> > If only the world worked the way we think it should. My brother found
> > the obit in the Boston Public Library as a microfilm copy of the paper.
> > The Library doesn't retain newspapers aft
John Graves wrote:
> Mike,
>
> If only the world worked the way we think it should. My brother found
> the obit in the Boston Public Library as a microfilm copy of the paper.
> The Library doesn't retain newspapers after they have been microfilmed.
> The film company does the filming in ret
Cotty,
Don't you mean shifty nits
John
Cotty wrote:
> Great Scott! (Or should that be Great Leroy!!)
>
> You need one of those nifty bits of software they use on CSI. That would
> do it ;-)
>
>
--
PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List
PDML@pdml.net
http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net
Mike,
If only the world worked the way we think it should. My brother found
the obit in the Boston Public Library as a microfilm copy of the paper.
The Library doesn't retain newspapers after they have been microfilmed.
The film company does the filming in return for copy rights and supplies
John Graves wrote:
> Given the number of OT's, I think it ok to add to the mix. Leroy
> Whitter is my great great grandfather and the person for whom my
> Grandfather was named. Although everyone who really know my
> Grandfather called him Roy, a source of great merriment to my siblings
>
On 22/09/07, John Graves, discombobulated, unleashed:
>
>http://www.flickr.com/photos/jhg2/1423880415/
>
>
>I am able to pull up some detail using a transparent inversion layer.
>Is there a next step pulling detail out this?
Great Scott! (Or should that be Great Leroy!!)
You need one of those
13 matches
Mail list logo