Original - The
S. A. Andrée station at
Spitsbergen, from a
photochrom print at the end of the nineteenth century.Edit 1 - Selective sharpening and denoising.
Tough request: the sharpening options don't normally produce the kinds of benefits for photochroms that they do for other types of photography--photochrom is a hybrid medium. We're dealing with lithography worked over a slightly grainy black and white photograph and some of the dyes used in this process have a tendency to mottle as they age. I'll see what I can do and upload if it generates any improvements.
DurovaCharge!21:38, 18 July 2008 (UTC)reply
Support (original preferred I think) Interesting enough image to make up for its softness (at 1024px it's fine). I wonder if the noise can be reduced though. —
Pengo01:21, 19 July 2008 (UTC)reply
Oppose A picture of the hangar from which the balloon launched doesn't seem highly encyclopedic, except during the actual launching. The people being photographed are distracting, unless we can identify them as two of the explorers.
Fletcher (
talk)
14:38, 21 July 2008 (UTC)reply
Original - The
S. A. Andrée station at
Spitsbergen, from a
photochrom print at the end of the nineteenth century.Edit 1 - Selective sharpening and denoising.
Tough request: the sharpening options don't normally produce the kinds of benefits for photochroms that they do for other types of photography--photochrom is a hybrid medium. We're dealing with lithography worked over a slightly grainy black and white photograph and some of the dyes used in this process have a tendency to mottle as they age. I'll see what I can do and upload if it generates any improvements.
DurovaCharge!21:38, 18 July 2008 (UTC)reply
Support (original preferred I think) Interesting enough image to make up for its softness (at 1024px it's fine). I wonder if the noise can be reduced though. —
Pengo01:21, 19 July 2008 (UTC)reply
Oppose A picture of the hangar from which the balloon launched doesn't seem highly encyclopedic, except during the actual launching. The people being photographed are distracting, unless we can identify them as two of the explorers.
Fletcher (
talk)
14:38, 21 July 2008 (UTC)reply