Things are mostly quiet on the
restoration front, as we wait to see the results of the Lebonfon
Cerebus 16th
edition replacement signatures.
Because of a few
delays, I ended up traveling on the day that the proofs were supposed
to arrive, but thanks to a Fedex redirect, I was able to pick them up
in Seattle when I got off the plane. It's always disorienting to see
“proofs,” these days, as most printers use what are generally
referred to as “soft proofs” – either screen proofs that are
worse than useless, or laser printer proofs that aren't fundamentally
different than what you might generate by yourself using a desktop
laser printer.
The proofs looks just about as expected, and I
spent most of my time looking them over making a mental checklist of
possible “Legacy edition” style edits and tweaks to the pages,
mostly involving tone cloning to shore up any areas of tone shrinkage
from pages sourced from aged original art. These are the type of
time-consuming fixes that Dave and I had talked about but that for
the most part I restrained myself from executing, only fixing what
seemed to me to be the worst instances, and making sure I
demonstrated all of these potential techniques in a few places for
demonstration purposes
The
only other real news this week is that I took an hour or so to page
through the source material available for High Society,
and I think we are going to be in much better shape. I separated out
the material by source and resolution, and spent a little time
adjusting my automated formula, and then pointed Photoshop's batch
action command at the whole folder of negatives and said “go.”
Two days later, the three hundred or so pages were done being
processed. Right before we headed out to the airport I flipped
through the folder and took a look at a dozen or so pages. They
looked perfect.
Why
the difference from the Cerebus
material to High Society?
I'll go into more depth later, but the short reason is that my
automated process relies on several steps of different types of
sharpening, and that this sharpening is prone to bringing out the
noise in newsprint scans. I dealt with this a few different ways in
the Cerebus pages, but
there's not really one solution to the problem. You either use some
kind of noise reduction and then have to compensate by bringing back
any lost line detail by sharpening by hand, or you can use more mild
noise reduction and have to spend time solidifying your blacks
afterwards. (“Noise” in the case of newsprint is just whatever
the computer sees and brings out that your eye doesn't perceive as
signal – pulpy colored portions of the paper, gaps in the blacks
that create the “dusky” solid black look, anything undesirable
that's there, but that under normal circumstances your brain is
capable of filtering out. Take all those things and sharpen and
contrast-adjust them, and all of the sudden they're much more
visually prominent than they were before.)
None of these
things are problems at all if you're sourcing your material from
negatives, which, if properly scanned, have almost no “noise” to
bring up. You can nuke them with sharpening, layer upon layer of the
most aggressive sharpening you have, and they just look sharper.
I'll have
step-by-step pictures for this when the book comes back from
Lebonfon.
But
for now, the future – for the next book, things are looking up. But
no more real work until we get the results from the Lebonfon
printing. And when that happens, I'll give everyone a walk through
the process of the replacement signatures, and talk about some of the
challenges they presented, and what those challenges say about the
eventual Cerebus
Legacy edition.
Sean Michael Robinson can be found online at Living The Line.
Sean Michael Robinson can be found online at Living The Line.
3 comments:
Looking forward to the step by step. Glad things are going well.
Looks fantastic, Sean.
Man, that Sim knows how to spot his blacks. Really dynamic panels.
The deep black and the brightest of white on the computer screen make those panels look better than anything I have. All I can say about the Legacy edition is: BETTER PAPER PLEASE!
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