Posts Tagged ‘photographer’
Tintype Photo
Sunday, August 7th, 2011

How to make a tintype from a digital photo?
Can anyone help me with this?
I’d suggest something like color removal in photoshop, or add a sepia tone layer or green gray layer to give it that old look, then use some rough brushes to create rough edges…
I looked around online for a tutorial, but I only found this one:
http://www.flickr.com/groups/photoshopsupport/discuss/72157605523734775/
Hope this helped
Getting Sold on eBay – Behind the Scenes – Episode 4 – Tintype Photos
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Photo Jigsaw Puzzle of Civil War Black Soldier. Tintype Of Sergeant J.l. Baldwin Of Company G, 56Th from Granger Art on Demand $24.99 Photo Puzzle, CIVIL WAR BLACK SOLDIER. Tintype of Sergeant J.L. Baldwin of Company G, 56th. CIVIL WAR BLACK SOLDIER. Tintype of Sergeant J.L. Baldwin of Company G, 56th U.S. Colored Infantry, organized in August 1863. Chosen by Granger Art on Demand. 10×14 Photo Puzzle with 252 pieces. Packed in black cardboard box of dimensions 5 5/8 x 7 5/8 x 1 1/5. Puzzle image 5×7 affixed to box top. Puzzle pi… |
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AMERICA AND THE TINTYPE $32.90 One of the most intriguing and little studied forms of nineteenth-century photography is the tintype. Introduced in 1856 as a low-cost alternative to the daguerreotype and the albumen print, the tintype was widely marketed from the 1860s through the first decades of the twentieth century as the most popular photographic medium. The picture-making preference of the people, it was almost never used … |
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Still: Cowboys at the Start of the Twenty-First Century (The M.K. Brown Range Life S.) $30.49 The cowboy may well be the quintessential American icon. Robb Kendrick has been photographing cowboys for twenty-five years, creating a magnificent artistic record that recalls the work of earlier photographers such as Edward S. Curtis, whose portraits of Native Americans have become classics. Kendrick even uses an early photographic process–tintype–to create one-of-a-kind photographs whose nine… |
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Revealing Character: Texas Tintypes (Photographs Portraits) $34.95 America’s first major contribution to the art of photography, whcih dates back to the heyday of the cattle drives (1850-1880), tintypes went on to become the country’s favorite portrait format. A tedious and unforgiving method of photography that requires patience and commitment from both the subject and the photographer, posing for a tintype requires more time than modern point-and-shoot photogra… |