Former S. Prekins Kroger, as seen during the Seessel's era (restored front logo)
And here's the promised "after" version of the photo posted yesterday, taking care of "correcting" the main Seessel's logo at least! How was I able to accomplish this? One clue would be that much of the lettering looks kind of similar, a fact I eventually caught on to after playing around with the photo for a while (I was too zoomed in to pay it much attention at first, haha)! So given that there were good parts of the lettering not covered by the mark, I did some creative cut and paste (and flip, and mirror, and paste, and paste again XD) over the marked over sections, then a few other "top secret" things to blend it all together. The 'L' (actually lowercase in the logo of course, but uppercasing it here so it isn't confused with an 'i') was the hardest part, as there was no other 'L' to take good parts from (yikes)! Much of that letter was reconstructed a handful of pixels at a time (as was the last 's'), and it took a few tries at those before I was remotely happy with the end result.
Former S. Prekins Kroger, as seen during the Seessel's era (restored front logo)
And here's the promised "after" version of the photo posted yesterday, taking care of "correcting" the main Seessel's logo at least! How was I able to accomplish this? One clue would be that much of the lettering looks kind of similar, a fact I eventually caught on to after playing around with the photo for a while (I was too zoomed in to pay it much attention at first, haha)! So given that there were good parts of the lettering not covered by the mark, I did some creative cut and paste (and flip, and mirror, and paste, and paste again XD) over the marked over sections, then a few other "top secret" things to blend it all together. The 'L' (actually lowercase in the logo of course, but uppercasing it here so it isn't confused with an 'i') was the hardest part, as there was no other 'L' to take good parts from (yikes)! Much of that letter was reconstructed a handful of pixels at a time (as was the last 's'), and it took a few tries at those before I was remotely happy with the end result.