Before the invention of photography, many artists employed optical devices known as the Camera Obscura or the Camera Lucida. Those devices allowed an artist to see the subject and drawing surface simultaneously, making it possible to create quick and accurate portraits that could be afforded by people of modest means.
With the contours of the faces and the figures traced on paper, an artist would use oil paints for facial details and charcoal to add shading to the garments, making this creation a unique piece of art.
The owner of this valuable piece of family history and a wonderful example of 19th-century American portraiture requested for the original to be cleaned and mended and to have the image scanned, resized, and digitally retouched.
Copies of the restored portrait were printed on fine art paper with a matte surface, giving the prints a similar look and feel to the original. They were then ready to be framed and presented to the family members during the annual reunion.