Friday, September 24, 2010

Four Easy Ways to Make Your Photos Look Vintage

1. Doctor Up the Shots You’ve Already Got.

Don’t have Photoshop? Don’t worry!

We found some awesome places online to help you convert your digital snaps into old-style vintage masterpieces super fast and without expensive photo-editing software!

Wanokato has a fantastic online tool for making your digital photos look vintage. Upload, click a button, and seconds later you’ve got an image that looks like it was pulled out of a hundred year old photo album!

Try
Rollip.com, a simple web application where you can apply over 40 different filters (including specific vintage ones!) to your photos. 
  
       2. Reuse and Diffuse.

Old photos are known for looking fuzzy, oddly exposed, scratchy, vignetted, and sometimes even dirty.

With a cell phone camera (or one you’re not worried about damaging) you can try putting Vaseline directly on the edges of your lens to give your photos an out of focus vignette just like old film cameras.

If you’ve got nice equipment, you should probably put your grease of choice on a clear lens filter that you aren’t worried about damaging.


You might also want to try:
Stretching a nylon stocking over your lens for images that look like they’re from old time toy cameras. (Try different colors, too!)
Experimenting with clear paper, wax paper, or anything else slightly transparent to shoot through.
Combining our Color filters with the grease/Vaseline method for photos with beautiful colors and awe-inspiring focus tricks!




3: Out With the new, In With the Old!

Back in the day, people had to walk uphill (both ways) in the snow for 4 miles just to take a photograph.

Now we’ve got digital SLRs, cell phone cameras that shoot HD video, and we can share any picture instantly with the rest of the world.

Been there, vintage-ized that? Then it’s time to break out the original shooters: expired film and old cameras!


Resurrect that old 35mm camera that’s been collecting dust in your attic. The dust might even add to the look you’re craving!
Try out some expired film! The older the better. The colors usually come out strange or faded, making them look like old vintage prints as soon as they’re developed! (This example was shot with color film several years past it’s expiration date.)
If you have a camera that takes Polaroid film, try shooting some Impossible Project Silver Shade Film. With the perfect old-style sepia color, this film also reminds us of beautiful photographs made at the turn of the 19th century.


4. Find A Photobooth!

Love nostalgia as much as we do, but don’t have access to working vintage cameras or film? No problem!

Treat yourself to one of the last remaining endangered species of photography: The analog photobooth.

Nothing beats sitting behind the curtain, staring straight into a camera for it’s un-timed flashes, and waiting 5 minutes outside the booth to retrieve your photo strip while it develops.

Luckily, the folks at Photobooth.net have been hard at work making analog machines easier to find around the world!

Check out their Photobooth Locator to find a working booth near you, and don’t forget to bring your top hat and monocle!

No comments:

Post a Comment