squirrel$$$bandit
Veteran
So I like to keep my film photos fairly natural. I generally just scan, import into Lightroom, straighten & crop, then adjust blacks and whites, and possibly the vibrance and saturation VERY slightly, for color photos. I might also "heal" away the dust marks in PS.
I'm a sucker for the black frame that scanning (and printing!) from negatives can leave around the edges of the photo. I love its unevenness and softness. Sometimes if one side doesn't have a black frame after a scan--that is, if the frame area is exactly even with the film holder--I'll fill in that edge back in, in black, with a slightly soft brush.
But today I started doing something a little more fake...I took a couple of crooked images (lakeside scenes, and nothing looks worse crooked than a lake), straightened and cropped....
....and then painted the ENTIRE black frame back in. They look terrific, but I know it's not the "real" frame. Of course, I really did scan it from a negative, and the real frame WAS there...but it's not the one you're seeing in the photos. In fact, I even rounded the corners a little to match the original frame.
How much of this kind of tarting-up do you consider "acceptable"?
I'm a sucker for the black frame that scanning (and printing!) from negatives can leave around the edges of the photo. I love its unevenness and softness. Sometimes if one side doesn't have a black frame after a scan--that is, if the frame area is exactly even with the film holder--I'll fill in that edge back in, in black, with a slightly soft brush.
But today I started doing something a little more fake...I took a couple of crooked images (lakeside scenes, and nothing looks worse crooked than a lake), straightened and cropped....
....and then painted the ENTIRE black frame back in. They look terrific, but I know it's not the "real" frame. Of course, I really did scan it from a negative, and the real frame WAS there...but it's not the one you're seeing in the photos. In fact, I even rounded the corners a little to match the original frame.
How much of this kind of tarting-up do you consider "acceptable"?