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Mark Beltran
{K:32612} 10/28/2004
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This looks great using the cross-eyed viewing technique. It's very important, as you know, that these historic documents be preserved for the future generations. You're doing a great job.
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Michael Kanemoto
{K:22115} 10/21/2004
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Bart:
I'll break it on down for you.
Father is Japanese-American, grew up in New York, California, and settled with my mother in Wisconsin. My mother was from Utah, maiden name of Hardy.
I went to school in Michigan, met my wife, and moved to Kansas to be with her while she gets her PhD from the University of Kansas.
This Photograph is of my great-great grandmother of my mother's father with her sister.
Funny you mention Hawaii - my great grandfather came to the US through Japan where he worked on a banana plantation to pay off his ocean fare. He then raised cattle in Hawaii.
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Bart Aldrich
{K:7614} 10/21/2004
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But you have a Japanese surname; I'm so confused. I've often wondered how an AJA ends up in Kansas anyway? Must be a non-Asian mother or adopted. Not that it's my business, of course. I lived in Hawaii and I know Japanese names. I'm just a curious Leo. Not too many Kansas farmers named Kanemoto. Ha!
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Marcy Massura
{K:1848} 10/14/2004
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Yes it is! and you have done a super job fixing this image.
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Michael Kanemoto
{K:22115} 10/13/2004
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Hey Var -
Yes, I have a 6 megapixel digital camera, and took a picture of this photograph which was in a scrapbook. Think of it as turning the camera into a scanner.
Once I had the digital photo of the scrapbook page, I did use Photoshop. I had to perspective crop to make the photograph "flat", and then I started to retouch and repair all of the damage.
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varome
{K:1263} 10/13/2004
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WOW! That's great...so you took a photo of an old photo and improved it? Good job! Photoshop?
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