View Full Version : faking "before" pics


coffee
09-19-2006, 08:45 PM
hi, i'm not a new member, but this is my first time posting.
i do retouching, and restoration and webdesign, part time but my day job (well... actually night job) is as an editorial photo editor. Part of my job is to make sure there is absolutely no manipulation to any of the images that come in, so when i stumbled across a freelance photog's website i was absolutely horrified to find that he had totally faked his "before" restoration pic. He put a fake rip on it and actually scrawled the word "DOG" using a blurred brush tool at like full opacity and then had the nerve to write in the caption that "this is a photo that was torn and defaced that i totally restored" then he showed the after photo (which was really the before photo, before he "digitally defaced" it).

anyway, i wrote him an email telling him how dishonorable and dishonest it was to fake your "before" pic but he didn't respond. My question to the group is... How common is it for people to fake their "before" pics? This is not the first "before/after" i've seen where i've wondered to myself "did they just desaturate a color image and then use the original as the colorized after?" or "did they add a ton of noise, saturation levels, and brightness/contrast to create the before? and then use the original as the after?" i've seen it done on foreign restoration sites a LOT, but this is the most BLATANT misrepresentation i've EVER seen and it was out of Florida, not some some third world country known for internet scams.

Cassidy
09-20-2006, 04:14 AM
Well I'd think a lack of true skill and misrepresentation is going to be found out sooner rather than later.......

......And bad news travels much faster than good news!

Vikki
09-20-2006, 05:26 AM
I've also seen quite a few sites that appear to have "faked" the before images. It's usually easy to spot, as the rest of their work does not match the skill level indicated in the faked images.

On the other hand, someone accused me of faking it (I haven't.) In particular, I received a comment to one of my images, similar to your comment "did they just desaturate a color image and then use the original as the colorized after?" , in my "colorings" gallery. Obviously, that person made a snap judgement.

My point being, sometimes, although it may appear faked, it isn't.

Faked? (http://www.pbase.com/vhansen/image/39431292/large.jpg)

Pam
09-20-2006, 08:59 AM
That's a great testament to how good you are, Vikki. If I came across your images, unmarked and without description, I'd say, "No, no, no!. Don't convert to b+w, keep those gorgeous colors!" :classic:

--
Pam (a big Vikki Hansen fan)
http://www.pbase.com/pam_r
'art is working on something 'til you like it...then leaving it that way'

NancyJ
09-20-2006, 12:08 PM
to be fair Vikki, its easy to see why people would assume that it was faked, its a little 'too good'. Which I know is a bizarre concept but if your work is too good then people will think its fake. A lot of your work is 'too good'.
We're a cynical species but you never go far wrong with 'if it looks too good to be true it probably is'.
Your work is probably the best colouring I've ever seen, in fact I'd go so far as to say you're probably one of the best in the world - your patience and attention to detail is what makes your work unbelievable - most people find it hard to believe anyone would go to so much trouble.
Given that you are probably one of the best in the world - it would be nice to see a little tutorial on your methods (not so subtle nudge in the direction of the tutorials forum) - there are many different ways to colourise a photo, it would be interesting to see your preference.

blue dog
09-21-2006, 04:40 AM
Vicki, I agree with everything NancyJ said. You are the best I've ever seen.

Vikki
09-21-2006, 02:59 PM
Wow, thank you all for such a great compliment!
I could write a tutorial, but then I'd have to kill you all...

Seriously, I use a method that's been online for ages. I always recommend this method, as from my experience coloring, it gives the best results. Most other methods require a lot more work and don't produce the results for all the effort involved. The link below has a tutorial for the technique.
Learning this technique, or any of the other methods, is only half the battle. Knowing what colors to use is a whole other thing. In order to get good at this, you need to study color images and then mimick the color on the b&w, in every little, last detail.

One last thing, the only way to learn and improve is to seek critiques from individuals who are in the know, and then follow their advice.

Here's that link:
http://www.worth1000.com/tutorial.asp?sid=161015

NancyJ
09-21-2006, 03:05 PM
Its interesting to hear your views on the technique.
I prefer curves to get the flat colours down - I find its quicker, easier and more reliable.
I then use the primary colouring technique on top to add depth and natural colour variation.
You must have the patience of a saint to do it all by that method.

Pam
09-21-2006, 03:17 PM
"You must have the patience of a saint to do it all by that method."

Truly. I can't imagine. It's tedious enough for me to create toning curves for my b+w images. Maybe that's why I stay away from coloring. That, and it really takes an artist's hand..and eye.

--
Pam
http://www.pbase.com/pam_r
'art is working on something 'til you like it...then leaving it that way'

HannibalVector
09-21-2006, 03:29 PM
My question to the group is... How common is it for people to fake their "before" pics?
Did you see this thread? :
http://www.retouchpro.com/forums/work-jobs/14058-retouch-scam.html
Too bad they removed the gallery!

So Coffee, you're a professional with a trained eye. That's good, we need more people like you to keep our profession pure.
Please do me a favour and give my gallery below a genuine check, so we get that out of the way. :bow:
Oh no wait, do Vikki's first, because she actually has been accused faking it.
Vikki, you're gallery looks great, excelent work! :bigthmb:

Wouldn't it be a great idea if there was something like a labour union or something that checks retouchers? If they pass the test they then get a genuine comfirmation logo or something that they can put on their website, so customers will know that they are dealing with real professionals. :idea:

Vikki
09-21-2006, 04:42 PM
Honestly, this method is easy once you get the hang of it. No selections.
I just use 5 layers: the original, red, blue, yellow, and green (added my own to the technique). I just paint on those layers. Very much like you would color in a coloring book; just color over everything. It doesn't take long at all.

Cameraken
09-21-2006, 06:43 PM
Wouldn't it be a great idea if there was something like a labour union or something that checks retouchers? If they pass the test they then get a genuine comfirmation logo or something that they can put on their website, so customers will know that they are dealing with real professionals.


Great Idea :bigthmb:

Who better than Retouch Pro to do this.


Ken

coffee
09-22-2006, 03:42 PM
So Coffee, you're a professional with a trained eye. That's good, we need more people like you to keep our profession pure.
Please do me a favour and give my gallery below a genuine check, so we get that out of the way. Oh no wait, do Vikki's first, because she actually has been accused faking it.

both your sites are very nice looking. i've actually learned a lot of really good techniques here. Being a photo editor, retouch is not something i ever get to do while i'm on the job so i really have no "professional" training. luckily i do have some artistic ability (thanks mom). i really believe it is impossible to make any headway in the field of retouch/restoration without some type of artistic ability.

anyway, i wasn't going to post the guys link because it doesn't appear to be linked to his main site anymore.... but the more i think about it, he should be ashamed for even putting it up in the first place.

http://www.croganphoto.com/misc/restore.htm

coffee
09-22-2006, 04:09 PM
My point being, sometimes, although it may appear faked, it isn't.

i did a manipulation once where i removed three people from a photo and i had several people say to me "now come on, that's two totally different frames".
of course this is a compliment, but you don't want people to think you are a fake. luckily i had taken several snapshots of the work in progress and i was able to show several stages of the job where you could obviously tell people were being cloned out. in the case of someone like yourself, Vikki, when your work is THAT good, it wouldn't hurt to do a few examples of your work in progress so that any doubters can see that you are actually doing the work. OR... in the case of colorization, take a famous photograph which is well known to be a black and white (like the famous sailor nurse wwII kiss pic) and colorize it.

HannibalVector
09-22-2006, 04:25 PM
both your sites are very nice looking.
Thanks for your review, but only the first site is mine! :D
I am just a Photoshoptv fan

anyway, i wasn't going to post the guys link because it doesn't appear to be linked to his main site anymore.... but the more i think about it, he should be ashamed for even putting it up in the first place.

http://www.croganphoto.com/misc/restore.htm

That's terrible! Who would believe that? :lmao:
Who would write "dog" on a picture like that? If it was a picture of an ex boyfriend than....
He really should be ashamed for that.

stopa
09-23-2006, 02:35 PM
Haniball- and the others: I think it is waste of time to spend our life to think and watch bad sites and works.
I think we should talk and think how breathtaiking retouches and manipulation was done.
Leave those poor-artist to forgotness.

HannibalVector
09-23-2006, 05:52 PM
Stopa, don't worry, I don't spend my whole life on a quest for fake retouchers.
I just stumble on them from time to time and they give me a chuckle!
And having some fun so new and then isn't wasting time, is it?

Btw, nice work on your website! :thumbsup:

eyegomay
09-23-2006, 08:22 PM
I am totally amazed by your work. I only play around with retouching photos... but your work really makes me say WOW! each time I click the next button. It is true... you have to have an eye for natural coloring and you've got it! I really enjoyed the detail in the picture with the old couple sitting against a brick wall. Your attention to coloring the bricks to be of different tones really brings the photo to life.

Kraellin
09-23-2006, 09:30 PM
eyegomay, welcome to RetouchPRO.

umm, to whom are you referrring, complimenting? these threads can get pretty disjointed. pays to say a name or quote a quote.

craig

Vikki
09-25-2006, 04:02 PM
Per Coffee's suggestion, a famous black and white photo colorized.
Dorothea Lange's "Migrant Mother"

HannibalVector
09-25-2006, 04:41 PM
That looks awesone Vikki, you past the genuine test. :bigthmb:

Kraellin
09-25-2006, 10:48 PM
vikki,

i think i'd seen that tutorial some time back, probably i saw a referral from you in another thread or something, and told myself, 'when i've got some time'. well, i made some time tonight and that's pretty amazing. how absolutely clever to paint with masks!

it no longer translates exactly into Paint Shop Pro 10 or 11, but i could understand it well enough to modify it to today's psp and still keep everything intact. in fact, rather than using hue/sat directly on the layers, i made 3 layer groups, one for each color, and added a hue/sat adjustment layer to each layer group. when i was done tweaking the masks i could go back and tweak the hue/sat adj layers also, giving that last little tweak to things.

very, very clever! thank you :)

i did a test image using the image used in the tutorial. it's probably not as good as you or flora do, but i thought it was a nice first run. it's attached.

craig