Introduction

Just before Christmas I scanned a heap of old family photos, including many black and white ones containing my parents and grandparents when they were young. A number of these very precious photos were in need of some restoration, so after scanning I began cleaning them up in Photoshop CS. I was curious to see how effective it might be to hand-colour them in.


Although I spent a considerable amount of time finishing the example image below, I did an initial "rough draft" of this image in about 15 minutes that looked 90% as good.
Original vs Hand-Coloured Image
 
The thing I particularly like about it is that it not only looks like a "real" hand-tinted photograph, but the technique is actually quite similar to that used with photographic paints (apart from having the benefits of zoom and undo). While I'm using a black and white photo of my grandparents' wedding day back in 1944, you could also use any coloured image, desaturate it, and follow the same process to provide a unique look.

Workflow

 

Firstly, open the image in Photoshop and perform any initial restoration tasks you intend to do, such as enhancing contrast, noise reduction, dust and scratch removal, healing blemishes or generally cleaning things up until you have a nice clear, clean black-and-white (or sepia) image, such as that shown below.
Ready to Begin
 
Next, duplicate the current layer by selecting the Background layer in the Layers window (on the right hand side), and then Choosing "Duplicate Layer..." the "Layer" menu. When prompted for a name for the new layer, enter something descriptive such as "Colouring Layer" to indicate that this layer adds the colour to your image.
Duplicate Layer
 
Select the new layer, and set its mode to "Color" and opacity to "70%" using the drop-down controls that appear in the Layers window (circled on the right-hand side in the screenshot below).

Opacity and Brush Settings
 
To start colouring, select the "Brush" tool from the toolbox as shown on the left-hand side of the window, ensuring the Brush mode is also set to "Color" (refer to top of screenshot above). Finally, choose the colour you wish to start tinting with. With this particular image, I will start with some skin-tones.
You will notice the image becoming tinted as you paint over the image with the brush. Adjust the brush settings (size, soft edge, opacity, etc.) to achieve various effects such as softly merging colours or giving sharp edges where appropriate. This screenshot below shows the result of tinting the bride's face with a single colour. You can begin to see the effect, but it needs more work. I prefer to fill in the large areas with roughly the correct tint first, and then go over it in more detail afterwards.

Colouring in the face areas
 
Now I start to fill in the features of the face below; applying red lipstick, brown hair, making the eyes green with white around them, and white teeth. It is important to note that skin-tones are generally not one uniform colour. I have found that with Caucasian people, the skin seems to often get redder as it goes into shadow and more yellow around highlighted areas. Also, certain areas such as cheeks and lips are naturally pinker than, say, the forehead. You may also want to "apply makeup" if you think it is appropriate (in the example below, I have applied lipstick and perhaps a little blush).

                                                           Applying "makeup"

That's basically the technique. Simply keep going with appropriate colours throughout the image, and your eyes will tell you what works and what doesn't. If you are working on an "important" photo, I think it is well worth doing a bit of behind-the-scenes research to get the colours exactly right.With this project, I searched the web for images of the WW2 New Zealand Air Force uniform to get the colours of my grandfather's uniform correct (don't forget the badges, shirt, tie, etc) and also found out what flowers my grandmother had in her bouquet on her wedding day. When I showed the finished photo to my grandmother, she immediately noticed both of these details and was very happy that I had taken the time to make sure they were correct.
Below is another screenshot showing the "Colouring Layer" at full 100% opacity (instead of the 70% we initially set it to). This simply highlights and illustrates the variations in colour I used when painting the skin-tones, and shows the "real" colours I picked to get the end result. Depending on how saturated the colours are you are painting with, and your tastes in general, you may want to use a different opacity level for the layer.
 Hand-Colouring Revealed

 Conclusion

So here is the final product. Just some parting tips:
  • I find that for my own taste, I'd rather err on the side of subtlety than over-saturate the image.
  • Also, adding a subtle sepia effect to the whole image helps maintain the aged character of the photo.
  • As I was trying to achieve the effect of a photograph that was hand-tinted in the traditional manner, I didn't colour the background, which also ensures that the background does not detract from the main focus of the photograph.

                                         Final Product

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