Rami, I think you’re asking the wrong question. Not many people care about the process. They care about the result.
I think a better question is: What do Rootschatters want from a restoration?
I don’t profess to know what Rootschatters want, but I believe I can make a distinction between members of Rootschat and the general public. And then I can say what I would want from any restorer to whom I entrusted the job of restoration of one of my family photos.
Most members of Rootschat are serious about their family history—otherwise they wouldn’t be here. Genealogists are serious about detail. We spend thousands of hours researching that detail. We are trustees of our family’s precious history.
In 2016 I posted a question to Rootschat’s Australia board. After 200 posts from several members over 7 months that thread was paused. Yep, Rootschatters are serious historians!
An old family photo is not just an old family photo. It’s a source of family history. A very precious source. The adage, “ a picture is worth a thousand words”, is no less true today than it was when first used over 100 years ago.
But, to a genealogist, it’s only worth 1,000 words if the details in that picture are as faithfully preserved as the details in any other source used by that genealogist.
I try to remember these things when I’m doing a restore for someone.
So, if another restorer asked me the question—what would you like from my restore of this picture of your grandfather and his siblings?—I might put it like this:
“Please…Imagine Adobe’s next big thing, in collaboration with Elon Musk, is a drone that can go back in time and copy photos. That’s what I want. Failing that, I want something that is as close as possible to that, something that preserves all the original detail, the texture, the ‘look’ of the photo (as it would have been in 1919), all this, including the frame, so that it gives me (and more importantly, my grandchildren and their grandchildren) a ‘real’ picture of what people, life and photos themselves were like back then.”
Peter