#1 Shoe Black

I am a photo colouriser and restorer, trading as PhotograFix. I have had the pleasure of working with some of the world's leading museums, photo archives and publishers, as well as private commissions and projects I undertake for fun.
I live in Leicestershire, England, have been married for just over a year, and we have two cats. My main work is colourising photos, but I also make and sell scale models, a process that uses many of the same methods of using colour and weathering techniques.
#2 Crawler

#3 Gypsy Caravan

I have been colourising photos professionally for 8 years and it grew out of a childhood messing around with photo editing software. I decided one day to see if I could make a living from colourising photos, began with those of friends and family, and it grew into a business.
#4 Dealer In Fancy Goods

#5 Flower Traders At Covent Garden

Simple portraits can take a couple of hours to colourise and photos with crowd scenes can take me days to complete. Colours are researched as much as possible, but where no records exist then I use my best judgement. It's for this reason that I insist colourised photos are never passed off as original historical records, as this would be irresponsible and misleading. I have several reference books for fashion colours, and for more recent photos resources such as Google street view can be useful when determining the colours of buildings.
The actual process is all done in Adobe Photoshop. I begin by cleaning up the original photo (removing dust, scratches etc and adjusting the contrast) and then layer by layer I digitally paint the colour tones until a picture emerges. This can take from a couple of hours to several days depending on the complexity.
#6 'Tickets' A Sign Painter

#7 Canal Bargemen

The most challenging part of colourising a photo is when the subject matter is something difficult to deal with, for example I have completed projects on slavery and the Holocaust which required a lot of research and were not the easiest subjects.
When photos can take several hours to complete, this can be a challenge as you begin to connect with the subjects more intensely and it can take over your life a bit. It does however come with the rewards of feedback from customers or the public. One example is a photo I colourised of prisoners in a concentration camp where the daughter of one of the pictured men recognised her father and contacted me thanking me for colourising the image and bringing him back to life for her. This sort of thing makes the hard work worthwhile.
#8 Furniture Shop

#9 Street Doctor

#10 Italian Musician

#11 Wall Workers (Bill Posters) Outside A Pub



