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Color filmWas it old B&W film? I've found that can still be usable years later. With color film the color can shift. Do the negatives have that color to them? I'm just wondering if it's the negatives or the scans.
Color filmWas it old B&W film? I've found that can still be usable years later. With color film the color can shift. Do the negatives have that color to them? I'm just wondering if it's the negatives or the scans.
f I couldn't solve the problem scanning color film negatives, the only remaining solution to me is to restore those yellowish photos.Maybe the color shifted since the nagatives seem to be one color. And that's pretty outdated for color film. Of course you could adjust the scans and see what you can do.
I can remove the yellowish color of the old photo to a color photo on GIMP inclusing adding blue sky. It takes lengthy to finish one damaged photo because not all damaged photos work with the same steps. The easy way is digitising the nagative color films.Maybe it would work to pick the ones most worth doing since it sounds like it will take time.
I'm not familiar with what you're using but can you 'remove color'? Then maybe try them as B&W images? Just thinking out loud...
Thanks for your advice.Radically changing the colors in digital video files isn't something a basic video editor isn't going to be able to do. The entry-level apps are limited to cutting, overlapping, adding titles and text, cropping etc.
Thanks.Gimp is a powerful program but not very intuitive. I would go into the search or index function and ask how to covert image to black and white.
Good luck,
ThanksGIMP has lots of desaturation options.
Colors > Desaturate > Lightness
Colors > Desaturate > Luminosity
Colors > Desaturate > Average
Colors > Hue-Saturation > Saturation
Colors > Black and White Film > Choose film type from drop-down list
Colors > Components > Channel Mixer > Monochrome
Image > Mode > Grayscale
Tools > GEGL Operatoin > many options listed here
ThanksI bought an add-in for Light Room Classic, Negative Lab Pro, works really well. You zero out the film cast by telling the add in what the base of the film is. It then auto white balances the conversion, and you can set it up as a preset to do batch conversions.
Not a free option, but simple to use on batches of negs to convert.