How Photographers ‘Photoshopped’ Their Pictures Back in 1946

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Retouching and manipulating photographs is done with fancy photo-editing programs these days, but back in 1946, making adjustments required a lot more than a computer, some software, and some pointing-and-clicking skills. Retouching required a whole box of tools, a very sharp eye, and an extremely steady hand.

Last year, Gene Gable of CreativePro came across a retouching book from 1946, titled, “Shortcuts to Photo Retouching For Commercial Use.” In it, retoucher Raymond Wardell explains the basics of the techniques at the time–think of it as a “Photoshop 101” book for photographers who came more than half a century before us.

Gable decided to scan a number of the illustrations for our enjoyment.

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Here’s the cover of the book:

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The equipment needed for retouching included pastes, rulers, brushes, cotton, palettes, rubber rollers, and more:

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Want to ‘shop a product photo of a watch dial? You’ll have to put it under a magnifying glass and use a fine-tipped brush:

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To crop a photo, you actually mark off the area you don’t want and cut it off:

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An explanation of what “halftone” is:

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The book offers some practical tips for how to best retouch photos:

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Finally, here are some before and after examples showing photos that have been retouched:

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Adobe Photoshop was released in 1989, 24 years ago, and 43 years after the publication of this book.

You can find more scanned illustrations from the book over on CreativePro.

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