View Full Version : Painting From Scanned Newspaper Photo


Photomaster
01-18-2006, 12:42 PM
This haunting image of a young girl, who is a Pakistani earthquake survivor, appeared in the newspaper two weeks ago. I scanned the image but was not pleased with the results but was able to do enough correcting in Photoshop to proceed to "Deep Paint" where I created this painting.

I emailed the painting to the photographer; Tomas Munita of Associated Press, and asked permission to post the painting. To my surprise he emailed back, complimented my work and gave me permission to post the painting. He also asked for the tif file so he could make a print.

PamSav
01-18-2006, 03:41 PM
I'm not surprised the photographer wanted a copy, you've done a beautiful job. Hard to believe this was from a newspaper photo.

Alcar
01-18-2006, 03:41 PM
Terrific job! You ought to do a tutorial on using Deep Paint. It seems to be a plugin that befuddles many, including me.
Alan

PJ Staley
01-18-2006, 04:41 PM
What a gorgeous job you did! What newspaper was the article posted in? I'd love to see the original to get an idea of the before/after effect.

Photomaster
01-18-2006, 11:43 PM
Thanks for the nice comments Pam and Alan.

I just recently acquired Deep Paint. The painting of the Pakistani girl was only my third attempt. I run Deep Paint as a stand-alone program rather than try direct interface with Photoshop. I kept getting "image is wrong color mode" messages when I tried to shuttle images back and forth. I've read through the Help file and need to do so again now that I have some experience. The program difinitely has unlimited settings.

I've created a Deep Paint tutorial: HERE (http://retouchpro.com/tutorials/index.php?m=show&id=211)

I uploaded several screen shots to go with the tutorial. Now if someone can just tell me how to make them appear in the tutorial...Help!

Photomaster
01-18-2006, 11:49 PM
The photo was in the Minneapolis Star Tribune 1/2/06.
Attached is the original scan.

Swampy
01-19-2006, 09:41 AM
Lovely, Photomaster! You really captured the eyes well.