Guide
Common Types of Photo Damage
A quick overview of common issues like fading, scratches, and water damage that photo restoration can fix.
Restoration
This hub gathers everything you need to repair time‑worn prints at home: reduce glare at capture, correct colour casts, sharpen without halos, and remove scratches and dust. Every tutorial is written for families—not retouchers—so you can restore memories in minutes.
New to digitizing? Start with the Scan on iPhone guide and come back here to polish results. Want to fix black-and-white prints instantly? Try the B&W Restoration tool.
Guide
A quick overview of common issues like fading, scratches, and water damage that photo restoration can fix.
Guide
Bring washed-out prints back to life. Follow simple steps to rebalance color, contrast, and vibrancy in faded photos.
Guide
Revive faded, scratched prints without pro tools. Follow beginner-friendly restoration steps to enhance colors and repair damage.
Guide
See how modern restoration tools revive faded, damaged, and black-and-white photos with color, clarity, and emotion.
Guide
Tired of blurry photos? Learn how to fix them on your iPhone with our step-by-step guide to sharpening, noise reduction, and better camera techniques.
Guide
Restore old, faded, and damaged photos on your iPhone. Our complete guide covers scanning, color correction, scratch removal, and digital preservation.
Restoration FAQ
Keep this cheat sheet handy when you hit a snag. Each card covers one decision—capture, detail, or creative polish—so you always know the next best move before opening an editor.
Re‑scan if glare, texture, or uneven lighting is baked into the image. Editing can polish small flaws, but capture quality sets the ceiling.
When the lighting is clean, you can spend time restoring colour and contrast instead of fighting reflections.
Use brighter, even light and bump resolution to 1200 DPI or switch to a camera‑scan rig so you can crop without losing detail.
Need gear ideas? Our best scanners guide compares flatbeds and camera setups.
Yes—treat colourization as a creative pass layered on top of a clean restoration. You can try our B&W restoration & colorize tool to do both in one step.
Always keep the original B&W master alongside the colour version so you can reference history or revert quickly.