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I'm talking 60s/70s/80s vintage color photographs. Also, any other tips you can give for getting this effect. Nothing digital/photoshopping, though. I have old cameras: an old Russian medium format camera and an old Russian 35mm camera.

2007-01-25 16:35:40 · 6 answers · asked by Kevin 1 in Arts & Humanities Visual Arts Photography

6 answers

Nothing looks like the 60;s/70's than kodachrome! great film, hard to find, and you have to send to a qualified kodachrome lab but worth it.

if you are shooting black and white, selenium tone the negs and prints to give it more contrast/pop.

Have fun!

2007-01-25 16:42:49 · answer #1 · answered by jeannie 7 · 0 1

Start off with a black and white photo on black and white paper. You can buy a sepia kit at the photo store. It comes wiht a bleacher that you soak your prints in. The image will almost disappear. then you sok the print in a sepia toner and the image reappears in a golden brown tone.

2007-01-29 05:18:28 · answer #2 · answered by frnkrizo 2 · 0 0

Check your area for used cameras and equipment, and you can usually get filters dirt cheap. So cheap that you can afford trial and error. One trick I know is when you want the lights to sparkle or star, put a piece of regular window screen right in front of the lens.

2007-01-25 16:46:28 · answer #3 · answered by johN p. aka-Hey you. 7 · 0 1

antique and fade color in iphoto is super easy

also in adobe the lightroom beta there is an antique
a vignette in lightroom is helps too
but not in iphoto. it just looks like a cheap filter.

2007-01-26 03:20:44 · answer #4 · answered by blusanders 2 · 0 1

Sephia looks sweet!

2007-01-25 16:54:20 · answer #5 · answered by Skinny 4 · 1 0

Sepia is the "standard" but you can experiment with desaturation. sepia. any photo filter under adjustment in PSCS2...

beaux

2007-01-25 23:44:33 · answer #6 · answered by beauxPatrick 4 · 0 1

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