Posted on 08/22/2012 1:49:28 PM PDT by NYer
You’d think she would have noodled that out after her first brush stroke...
She must’ve worked fast. I’d think someone would have noticed her working on it.
Must have started out as a tattoo artist.
Possibly a little late.
Yeah if you look at the picture she covered every square inch. At what point did she say "Oh, Sh*t". She must have had one of those fully automatic brushes with an oversized paint magazine.
I bow to the master. Have done furniture but would be terrified to try to restore a painting. All of those go out to professionals.
Heck, I have an ink stamp of some lips I think that would be better.
Wait - which one was Before and which one was After, again?
She plagiarized the image of Christ that was on my toast this morning! (Unfortunately I ate it.)
I’ve seen better frescos from three year olds.
Old reproduction before the effects of time seen on newer photos.
People!
As a general proposition: do not restore old objects without professional advice. Do not "clean up" paintings with chemically active solutions. Do not take a wire brush to an old gun. Do not stain or varnish old wood. If you feel tempted, try a small patch where it won't be a huge loss losing. Do not overpaint no matter what level of fidelity to original you think you can render. An old object made to look like new loses all its value. Consult with a museum before any restoration project, on anything older than 50 years.
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GGG managers are SunkenCiv, StayAt HomeMother & Ernest_at_the_Beach | |
Thanks NYer. |
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I never had seen such a resemblance of Barbara Streisand before.
My heart goes out to the woman who meant well. It so easily can seem to curse her till the day she dies and will obviously present a tribulation to her which she has to overcome through faith in Christ.
The ‘restoration’ is so different than the original.
Consider the eyes.
Was this the painting beneath the original or do think this is painted on top of the original.
It doesn’t seem consistent with simply blotting out faded paint, but really looks closer to a rendering of a face being seen by the artist.
She may have added a little extra work for a good restorer, but I don't think it's anything that can't be brought back to pretty much it's original appearance.
Looks like a Howler Monkey in a Nightgown. :-(
But seriously, who in a position of authority believed it was a good idea to let an 80-something (and probably senile) little old lady try to restore an historic work of art ?
I don’t even try to change my own oil, for crying out loud!
YOU WIN the funniest post on this thread award.
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