Originally Posted by
Geoff F
That looks good to me, Sandy.
With these old photographs etc it is often worth doing two versions, one exactly as the source image appears now plus an 'improved version'.
Attempting to restore to original condition is tricky because it can be difficult to assess the amount of time fading. Very old images, say 1860 to 1890, were often a rather pale yellowish tint; then, later images became more of a darkish brown with more contrast. After which they gradually became more of a greyish tone which could be quite pale or with more contrast.
When there is a bit of persistent noise in the shadows I often make two copies from the original Raw image, or create a duplicate image when working from the edit window, and give one image more noise reduction than the other. The two edits can then be gradually merged with masks.
Noise reduction can add a bit of softness but by gradually doing it this way you can keep areas like faces quite sharp but allow some of the noisy shadows to blur a fraction. Often, you only need to introduce a fairly low opacity bit of the masked image, with a soft brush, to make a considerable reduction to the noise effect without overdoing any softness.