Cleaning.Tips.Net Welcome toCleaning.Tips.Net

Helpful Links

Cleaning Home
Tips.Net Home

Ask a Question
Make a Comment

Cleaning Tips
Health Tips
Home Tips
WordTips

Newest Tips

Using a Sleeve Board When Ironing

How to Remove Silly Putty from Blankets

How to Remove Silly Putty from Carpet

Removing the Sour Smell from Wet Carpet

Cleaning Your Freezer

Cleaning Plasma TV Screens

Cleaning LCD Screens

 

 

Cleaning Old Photographs

Summary: When working with old photographs it is best to try to determine the method by which they were processed before you attempt to clean them. For very old photographs, consult with a professional restorer before you try to clean them yourself.

While perusing Grandma's old photographs, did you spill liquid or food on them? Don't panic! The photo isn't ruined. There is a way to clean old photographs. Follow these steps to clean old photographs, and then read the pointers for preserving them for future generations:

  1. For fresh stains, act quickly. Keep in mind that photographs are processed in liquid, so water will not harm them. Place the photo in a stream of running water, or in a pan of clean water.
  2. Gently hold the photo by the very edge, and swish it back and forth in the water.
  3. Using your fingers as a squeegee, remove the excess water from the photo.
  4. Inspect the photo for water droplets, and dab at them with paper toweling.
  5. Place the photo between paper towels to remove all water.
  6. Place the photo on a thick bath towel and then use a hair dryer on the highest heat setting to dry the photo completely, moving the dryer back and forth at least ten inches away from the photo.

The previous steps are not intended for very old photos, such as ferrotypes. And never, ever use water or liquid on photograph negatives, as you will completely destroy the image. It is best to take very old photographs to a professional restoration artist to have them cleaned, but you can enhance and preserve old photographs yourself if you have a computer and a photo editor. I use Picasa2 as my photo editor, and have scanned and then enhanced many old photos for my personal library. Follow these steps to preserve and enhance your old photographs with a photo editor:

  • Scan your photograph.
  • Choose to import it into your photo editor.
  • With your editor, choose to crop, straighten clear red eye problems, adjust contrast, lighting, color, color temperature, and even sharpen the photo.
  • Save the "cleaned" photos to a folder on your hard drive, and then store the original old photographs in dry, clean conditions at a steady room temperature with little humidity. Keep original photographs from direct sunlight.

When cleaning old photographs, try to determine the processing used for the particular print. Water will ruin certain types of prints. Avoid scratching or rubbing photographs while cleaning them, as doing so may etch the print. Avoid writing with ink on the fronts – or backs – of photographs, as the ink can transfer through to the print. If you must write on an old photograph, use pencil and write very lightly.

Related Tips:

Make Quick Work of Thanksgiving! Thanksgiving famly gatherings can be stressful on everyone involved. Why not discover the secrets to making the cleanup as quick and painless as possible? Check out Top Ten Tips for a Quick Thanksgiving Cleanup today!

 
 

Comments for this tip:

No comments for this tip. (Be the first to leave your comment!)

Leave your own comment:

*Name:
Email:
  Notify me about new comments for this tip
Hide my email address
*Text:
*What is 2+3? (To prevent automated submissions and spam.)