Showing posts with label jackie o. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jackie o. Show all posts

Saturday, May 7, 2016

Colorized JFK & Jackie

A colorized tandem studio photo of JFK and Jackie presumably during their first years in the White House. The original has sever moire patterns when enlarged, requiring some smoothing both before and after colorizing.  Again, some liberties and guesswork were used on their clothes and the background.


Tuesday, April 26, 2016

Coloized JFK & Jackie as Newly Weds 1953

Here;s a colorized JFK and Jackie on their wedding day at the Kennedy estate in Newport, Rhode Island in Sept 12,1953 just a few months after John gifted Jackie with a 2.88ct diamond engagement ring from Van Cleef & Arpels.
Someone pointed out the month of the wedding was September when the leaves and the grass start to yellow. Did a slight modification on the JFK-Jackie wedding day colorization to make the grass a bit yellowed from the earlier colorization I made below.


Wednesday, March 16, 2016

Creative Liberties: Coloized Wedding Portrait of Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy

Creative Liberties

Vintage photos provide an opportunity to engage in creative liberties that enhance the outcome.  This is what matters to me - the outcome.  Faithfulness to the original photo is a illusory considering that the colorization process on its own creates an entirely new visual experience that renders the original vintage photo a mere outline and a shadow. The outcome is no longer the same as the original. That is why colorized vintage photos can be copyrighted.  They are legally considered derivative works entitled to their own intellectual property protection for the colorizer.

Here is a vintage portrait of the late Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis taken in 1953 on the day of her wedding to Senator John F. Kennedy from Massachusetts. I could have used baby blue, fuschia, yellow or mint green on her dress that can create a more pleasing visual result. However, from online sources, I learned her wedding dress was white. That was the only concession I made but the rest were all a products of creative liberties that on the whole renders the colorized image entirely different from the original.