How to Make Your Pictures Look Vintage; Tips for a Vintage Edit
A vintage edit can be achieved by either taking a photo on a film camera, or editing your photos with apps. In this post, I’m going to show you how to give your iPhone photos a vintage/film edit with just a few editing apps! Afterwards, you will be able to create a vintage looking aesthetic to your Instagram feed, which creates a cohesive grid that people tend to appreciate.
Lately, I’ve been receiving questions about how I edit my photos and people have been sending me their photos to edit as well. As a result of some of these inquiries, I’m going to show you exactly how to perfect that vintage edit to any photo.
Disclosure: These tips are targeted towards those of you who shoot content with your iPhone and utilize apps within the app store to edit. If you are shooting on a DSLR, the quality is better and may require a slightly different editing approach.
Shoot in Natural Light
First and foremost, if you’re going to be editing your photos using multiple photo editing apps, your image is going to diminish in quality along the way. But wait; before you start freaking out, let me share a tip with you.
Tip: Shoot as much content as possible in NATURAL LIGHT!
We can thank the sun for providing the most amazing filter, lighting, and shadows to our images naturally. On top of this, less editing and distortion is required because the quality is typically already amazing, especially if you are shooting at golden hour (i.e. right before sunset or right after sunrise).
Photo Editing Apps: I Phone using VSCO
Next, increase the skin tone to about +1.5 – +2, increase the sharpness of the image to about +1.0, and increase the grain to +1.0 as well. Lastly, screenshot the image and crop out the black borders.
Afterlight2
This app you DO have to pay for, but I think it’s only $1.99 and it’s so worth it! First, import your photo and make any color changes that you deem necessary.
For instance, you can navigate to the “selective saturation” tool and either increase or decrease the colors in your photo. Depending on your color profile or theme, you may want to decrease the greens and increase the orange tones, etc. But, that is totally up to you.
Vintage Edit Inspiration
Thanks so much for reading! I appreciate you.
XoXo, Tori