I'm reminded of when I had a heavily obscured portrait of my great grandfather restored. It turned out to be my great grandmother. 😌
@Evermoreswiftieeeeee132 ай бұрын
That's amazing
@philomenahearn17172 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@amazinggrace56922 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂
@chloeuntrau45882 ай бұрын
🤣
@lenajesse2 ай бұрын
😄🤣
@polanovskiАй бұрын
Bro unlock almost all skill tree. Woodworking, painting, restoring, storytelling.
@planetearth8044Ай бұрын
also videography!
@alasdairblackmore2592Ай бұрын
Deluding ... you shouldn't forget / ignore his attempts to appease his false gods / future [or current] employers by deluding his viewers. The heat table didn't come into it until after the foam was removed and he smelled "something familiar" ... and yet, whilst using the heat table to remove the last layer of board, he claims that he didn't use the heat table whilst the foam was still on the board because the foam is an insulator. That's when I quit the video, because I'm sick of / done being being misled by misleaders / deluded by deluders. I was seriously tempted to quit when the solvents started pumping nasty chemicals into the air without a mention.
@Golgi-GygesАй бұрын
Mostly impressive. As someone good with metalworking and woodworking, I wondered why he wasted so much of the (diagonal) bracing wood in the corners.
@macformeАй бұрын
@@alasdairblackmore2592 buh bye
@Rosi_in_spaceАй бұрын
@@alasdairblackmore2592 Maybe you are too smart for watching youtube videos?
@stephenmartin83312 ай бұрын
I'm not an art person, but watching someone who is really good at their job is something special.
@peglamphier47452 ай бұрын
I call it 'competence porn.'
@DaeneiracornАй бұрын
@@peglamphier4745 the best kind of porn lol
@smittysmeeeАй бұрын
@@peglamphier4745 lol well now so do I
@Jake-uf6giАй бұрын
You don’t like art?
@buzzrdfuzzyАй бұрын
@@Jake-uf6githat's not what he said
@thelionoobАй бұрын
my jaw dropped seeing the overpainting come off, showing how much of the subtle shading had been hidden. The rim light around the neck and chin, the attention to the colors of the lighting on the shirt and the details on the eyes, in an attempt to preserve the art the skill of the original artist was obscured
@toomanymarys7355Ай бұрын
I thought it was a super crude folk painting! I had no idea is was such a serviceable portrait.
@hedgiehogUKАй бұрын
I agree with you completely. And what a difference between eyebrows painted by an artist and a low-grade conservator (who may have used a black marker pen) 😮😂
@rich1051414Ай бұрын
Even the silky sheen of the shirt.
@HypnoPol14995 күн бұрын
My dear friend who died last year used to love watching your videos whilst he was ill. We both love art and he would tell me to watch...I now have and I think it is because this young man looks a little like my friend. Wonderful and magical work. I have now subscribed.
@MateusAntonioBittencourt2 ай бұрын
In 200 years "Someone trying to conserve this painting used nylon gossamer. Now my job is harder than it should've been."
@arothmanmusic2 ай бұрын
lol I was thinking the same thing! 😂
@StoicTheGeek2 ай бұрын
Because of this nylon gossamer, I can’t use the biological nanobots I would use on a well-preserved painting, so I’m going to try using these old mechanical nanobots, but they are going to be much, much slower.
@JaysonRussell-dm7qfАй бұрын
It'll be a lot easier than the old old conservation methods to remove because everything is reversible and it's all written down somewhere, despite that, 1,000,000% yes. Conservation has developed so much in these 200 years and the speed of innovation is always rapidly increasing
@nowandaround312Ай бұрын
@@StoicTheGeek If these techniques won't be considered a well-preserved painting in 200 years then who's doing 2020s-era restoration significantly better? They need to start a KZbin channel
@howdypotowtyАй бұрын
@@nowandaround312 I think you're missing the joke.
@Here4Years2 ай бұрын
What Julian really wanted to say: "The painting and the sitter look wonderful, and I'd say we've cleaned up this mess. Except for that haircut. Not even I can fix that disaster."
@nikibordeaux2 ай бұрын
It's not a haircut, it's called getting bald. Only thing you could do is to shave all hair off.
@darrelljohnston86762 ай бұрын
Lmao..my eyes go right to that hair.
@serenity64152 ай бұрын
@nikibordeaux agreed, but it's how sharp-edged and square the patch is. It makes it look intentional. If it were a little wispy and looked like natural hair loss it would be fine.
@danaondrackova34312 ай бұрын
the only time I allow Julian to overpaint an original :D whats killing me more than the megawidows peak is the frilly ends :D
@LindaMourning-j1x2 ай бұрын
They covered up the maleness of his face, the 5 oclock shadow.
@gigaherz_2 ай бұрын
It is always funny when you are retourching and I mentally go "way too yellow" or "way too red" or such, and then a second later you are going over it again and I just go "nevermind it's good now."
@lerkzor2 ай бұрын
Just like watching Bob Ross and he decides to use let's say Crimson as a base for the snow, and you are like "What are you doing Bob, red for snow?" but then a few minutes later after he adds some more details you are all like "Bob, you son of a mother, you have done it again" - leaving him with a beautiful landscape ... which he grabs the dark colors and installs a HUGE tree trunk over all that lovely work and you are once again like "BOB NO you have ruined it" but then he gives his happy chonkin tree a friend (because we all need friends) and somehow it brings the whole painting together and gives it MILES of depth and all you can do is sit there in amazement realizing that you are NOT the master!
@chillfactory90002 ай бұрын
@@lerkzor I'm literally an artist and I do this. I'll watch people do oil or gouache paintings and I'm going "ew, why rust for your base?" and yet they make the most perfect winter landscape or field of grass over it.
@SecretSurname2 ай бұрын
@@lerkzor This is so accurate. Every single time I watch a Bob Ross video I'm like "WHAT HAVE YOU DONE BOB?!" and then a minute later I'm like "Oh jk nvm." 😂 You'd think I'd know better by now, but nope.
@XxGalacticIntrovertxX2 ай бұрын
I thought the exact same thing. It seems “off” at first but within the next 1-2 strokes everything just has harmony. Just a testament to his talent and hard work!
@mamamajestic98722 ай бұрын
@@lerkzor they stream Bob Ross on Twitch and the channel has "RUINED" and "SAVED" emotes so chat can react the exact same way. lol
@ahmeenahisreal4461Ай бұрын
I am slowly losing my eyesight and I have been watching his videos for a couple of years and I just wanted to say I think he should read books on tape like an audible and also I think he should do graphic novels on tape like an audible because his voice is so soothing. It's so entertaining that even though I cannot see. The artwork very well.I still watch his videos or should I say listen to his videos because they are soothing and amusing and very informative
@its-virox2 ай бұрын
I just love that Julian knows we’ve all seen every single one of his videos yet still treats us as if it’s our first time watching ❤
@markclans32842 ай бұрын
This was my first. Not sure why it appeared but engrossing.
@cydneygeorge-abatecola1600Ай бұрын
I thought that too when he explained the hot table procedure!
@vladimus9749Ай бұрын
@@markclans3284 my first as well. I'm not interested in art but do like learning how things get fixed which I'm guessing is why the algorithm decided to take a chance on me.
@kolejnytrupАй бұрын
And it works! If you watch Julien's work for the first time, it's live wow thanks for explaining. If you watch 100 video, you know evactly what to expect. I have the same fun every time Julien explains how to use hot table, and why does he put extra layer between paint and retouch. It makes watching every next restoration live some kind of ceremony and I'm all for that ❤
@JodiCraiglow2 ай бұрын
I simply cannot get over what a difference getting rid of that overpaint made -- he looks like a completely different person!
@BaumgartnerRestoration2 ай бұрын
Kinda like a normal person... kinda ;)
@ashwin.unlead2 ай бұрын
@@BaumgartnerRestoration he looks so much better post all the cleaning
@Knotaro_bot2 ай бұрын
@@BaumgartnerRestorationmuch better, but still quite an odd looking person 😂
@suesaville31602 ай бұрын
🎉Even your genius can't change the hairstyle!
@peterespada62262 ай бұрын
These overpaints always change the subject’s physical appearance and features.
@danthemanhart2 ай бұрын
The fact that he thinks of the next person who will have the privilege of conserving this painting in the future speaks volumes of his character. He takes the time to not only appreciate the painting and to make it whole again, but he also takes the time to make sure that with each painting, the next conservator has an easier time conserving each and every piece
@kettleworks2 ай бұрын
he’s thinking of the next guy because he’s someone else’s next guy. it’s righting the wrongs of the previous restorer’s work both in their craft and possible lack of empathy for the next restorer
@RenmiouАй бұрын
@@kettleworks He's also properly looking after the painting itself past his own limited window of experience: if the painting is preserved in a way that makes the next person's job less of a mare, it stands a better chance not to be damaged in the process in the future.
@bobbyrayofthefamilysmith24Ай бұрын
@@kettleworks I was the previous guy. Nothing wrong with my work this guy is over dramatic and adds many "problems" for views and effect. I'm one of the best restoeres in the US
@RochelleHasTooManyHobbiesАй бұрын
Not character as much as craftsmanship - that is the duty of EVERY conservator. Everything they do should be easily reversible, so as not to stress the painting when their work inevitably fails in 200 years (because adhesive always fails eventually).
@CaroleDeakin26 күн бұрын
@@bobbyrayofthefamilysmith24you must be joking…
@PINTandDALE2 ай бұрын
Great rescue job! You know, this artist was not what you'd call an 'Old Master', but you treated the painting with the same respect and care that you'd give a Rembrandt.
@BaumgartnerRestoration2 ай бұрын
Maybe not technically an Old Master but to someone this was and is a very important piece and it's not my job to judge... just to fix
@DBZVelena2 ай бұрын
@@BaumgartnerRestoration which is why we love and respect the skill you use in your work.
@cavemann_2 ай бұрын
@@BaumgartnerRestorationIt's a healthy outlook on art in general and I'm happy to see such an influential figure preach it.
@nuancedmusings-ronneefullerton2 ай бұрын
❤@@BaumgartnerRestoration
@mwater_moon28652 ай бұрын
@@BaumgartnerRestoration Do you know who it was?
@sarahmarramaldi297925 күн бұрын
It’s truly frustrating to see people not respect a intricate skill/craft like this, this is my first time watching your videos but I’m so happy to see you giving true love to what once was and bringing life back into it with such careful consideration and tedious work. Bravo my friend, subscribed 🤍🔒
@AzothifyАй бұрын
it's pretty bad when just removing the previous touchups and grime left it looking a thousand times better than whoever worked on it prior, Cracks and all. Your restoration afterword was just phenomenal.
@bobbyrayofthefamilysmith24Ай бұрын
Ok for an amature job
@kolejnytrupАй бұрын
@@bobbyrayofthefamilysmith24 I am waiting for you doing better job then and film it the same way. Anyway, have some good wishes as people depressed and frustrated are usually less likely of spreading good energy and more likely to leave hating comments. May your live be full of love, joy and satisfaction. May your relations with yourself and others be healthy. May you have a peace in your heart so even if things are heavy and difficult to bear, you still feel good inside.
@RochelleHasTooManyHobbiesАй бұрын
@@kolejnytrup He's bitter cuz he's the guy who filled in with tape and glued on foam-board, according to another comment of his. Not sure whether I believe the claim or not, but hoooboy.... is he delusional if he thinks his work is up to par. Just because he didn't use wood glue to attach the foam board doesn't make it right, even if the foam board is acid free (which I doubt). And the man clearly doesn't know how to varnish a painting. That was ridiculously thick. And the nail in the coffin.... He did NOT clean the painting before retouching/varnishing. Wtf. Basic principle in ANY trade. At the very LEAST, the owners of the painting were so dissatisfied with the work that they had it reconserved at considerable cost, because all this overpaint probably glowed under UV and thus seriously devalued the painting. Not to mention that the face looked disturbingly smoothed over - it was just creepy without the shading from the original artist.
@nikkiofthevalley11 күн бұрын
@@RochelleHasTooManyHobbiesEven in a completely unrelated field (soldering and repairing electronics) the first thing you do before doing anything is clean it! It's insane to me that somebody wouldn't think to clean something before trying to fix it...
@faolnagael75912 ай бұрын
Wow, watching the heavy handed overpaint removed to reveal a delicate touch just absolutely transformed the image.
@HuhHowboutThat2 ай бұрын
I had my classic "reveal" look, 😯 but with an addition of a hand pressed to the center of my chest. The eyes! Oh I wish Julian would paint something, anything. He truly has a master's touch. 😘🤌🏻
@nates57032 ай бұрын
The eyes have so much more nuance and humanity. Looked like he was wearing makeup before, lol.
@creampuffmeАй бұрын
I always love seeing how vibrant and alive everything is when he is done cleaning!
@porcupine_cake2 ай бұрын
The foam dissolving is sooooo satisfying!
@b0rd3n2 ай бұрын
and a bit discusting at first! He seemed to have gotten the habg of it fairly quick tho with scrapers and by going rectangular to maximize the use of the right tool, scraper. Imagine if the foam board had only been foam, without the board to protect the canvas...
@porcupine_cake2 ай бұрын
@b0rd3n I see how it can look gross too. Personally, I enjoy slightly messy things, so I loved it! I'm sure if there was exposed canvas without the second board, he would have considered that in the approach.
@potatopotatow2 ай бұрын
I wish he had worn a respirator….
@Everywhere22 ай бұрын
Scared me, actually.
@HuhHowboutThat2 ай бұрын
It looks like Venom! 🖤
@caleblatreille82242 ай бұрын
Seeing this restored to a simple but dignified portrait from what was basically a cartoon is honestly more satisfying than some of the restorations you do on master works.
@kellymiller79862 ай бұрын
He brought out the person underneath the cartoon.
@turolretar13 күн бұрын
It still looks like a child
@comradewindowsill425312 күн бұрын
@@turolretar got that 14 or 40 look
@jjjcmo8 күн бұрын
I’m gradually getting a fuller appreciation of portrait paintings. Something about this medium discloses a deeper sense of the soul of the sitter, even if it’s not photographic perfection of the actual person. I could spend hours viewing these fine portraits.
@evelienvanerven5826Ай бұрын
I'm a wood and furniture conservator in training, and I have found that this only has served to increase my appreciation for the paintings folk. All that time we spend practicing joinery and our plethora of other skills, all that time the paintings students down the hall are focusing on things like these. The apparent ease with which you perform your craft speaks volumes: you are a master at work. My hat's off to you sir.
@RochelleHasTooManyHobbiesАй бұрын
Do you mind if I ask which state you're in? I've really wanted to get into furniture restoration, but finding a place with an open apprenticeship has been... uh... Well, I haven't found any. I think I must be looking in the wrong place.
@evelienvanerven582628 күн бұрын
@@RochelleHasTooManyHobbies I don't mind the question at all! Unfortunately I'm not based in the US, as is implied from your question, but rather halfway across the world where I'm attending the University of Amsterdam's Conservation and Restoration programme. I'm not sure if you have the prerequisite background for a university conservator training, but I'll ask around for places that actually offer this degree in the US. I don't think I can be of much help in finding an apprenticeship position, but I would nevertheless like to wish you all the luck in the world in getting one. I hope you'll be able to realise the dream of becoming a fine furniture conservator.
@lenajesse2 ай бұрын
1:08 This is about where my brain got stuck at...and for good 15 minutes was able to think only: "FOAMboard?!?!" 😯😱 😄
@eyerenm.saragosa2847Ай бұрын
I was looking for this I’m glad I’m not alone 😂 I heard that and I’m also like “they had the audacity to disgrace such a painting by putting on FOAMBOARD!?!?!1!!1!,” 💀
@marytataryn51442 ай бұрын
"...and I remember back to my crafting days, back when i was a kid..." this guy was born to do archival restoration!
@fionafiona11462 ай бұрын
Given that he practically lived in his dad's workshop during childhood holidays, that rings true
@nilspochat866529 күн бұрын
@@fionafiona1146 Yet it's the only reason one would not question his process in this video. *The result is proper* but this is not how you're taught to do such a restoration these days (here in france at least, it differs a little from region to region of europe). I'm lacking in vocabulary to explain it in detail since most terms wouldn't translate literally but this is not how my teachers would handle it.
@fionafiona114629 күн бұрын
@@nilspochat8665 makes sense, given the USA lacks the integrated trade school apprenticeship system and is a lot slower to reach certain professional outcomes. As daughter to an electrician I was disturbed to learn about wire nuts and their widespread use
@danemclaren567816 күн бұрын
What’s wrong with the widespread use of wirenuts?
@fionafiona114616 күн бұрын
@danemclaren5678 depends on how well you train the crafts people installing them in cardboard houses (Even twisting wires and dipping them in liquid tar had better statistical outcomes)
@morningstarred2 ай бұрын
something i think is really neat is that in this video in particular, when julian applies the final varnish, because of the way the light is shining on the painting in the shot you can really see the way that the light hitting the painting changes as he brushes out the varnish and the varnish dries!
@MelaBruxa2 ай бұрын
Julian can make watching the varnish dry an interesting experience :)
@melliflousbufoАй бұрын
Yep - I spotted that, too. It really showed why and how he was doing it.
@jpbaley20162 ай бұрын
You appear to have the 5 things an true art restorer needs: patience, knowledge of materials and equipment, a meticulous attention to detail, an innate ability to see what a painting was meant to be, and the talent to bring it all together as if you were the original artist. After the much publicized fiascos of some restorations, you have opened my eyes to how true artists in their field are able to bring a painting back to its original form. Kudos!
@grandmasmagic38582 ай бұрын
just after the cleaning alone his face looked so much brighter..once you filled in all those spots he was one again with the canvas...thank you for having the ability to refreshen these paintings and to make them viewable again for further generations....
@emeraldqueen19942 ай бұрын
To call the “conservator” before you SLOPPY is an UNDERSTATEMENT…. What you gave this painting, the artist and the sitter, Julian, can only be described as a “GLOW UP” / “RESPECT”
@Benintende19522 ай бұрын
And the use of foam board makes me think it was relatively recent?
@baivesanАй бұрын
Excuse my language, but the previous conservator's work was ass. Literally.
@RochelleHasTooManyHobbiesАй бұрын
@@Benintende1952 Exactly. So for it to fail SO quickly (the orange line down the entire face definitely being evidence of failure)... Yikes. I hope the owner succeeded at getting a refund.
@yutt12 күн бұрын
4:02 The conservator label he removes is his own...
@vsGoliath962 ай бұрын
God damn, what a hairstyle. You've heard of the widow's peak, but have you ever encountered the widow's mesa?
@BaumgartnerRestoration2 ай бұрын
hahah
@richessa2 ай бұрын
Looks more like widow's comb forward to me. Unfortunate hairstyle in either case
@LeesaDeAndrea2 ай бұрын
Now he looks human.
@douglasw96242 ай бұрын
The ex used to have a widows peak...I called it her "Eddy Munster". She never did appreciate my humor ha ha..
@suefraser36112 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@CallyKariShokka2 ай бұрын
I don't think I've ever said "why??" so many times in one of your videos, what was the previous 'conservator' thinking? TAPE?? Foam?? Amazing
@HobbyOrganistАй бұрын
It's like an antique cast iron NY City fire alarm pedestal I owned that I sold back in the 1980s, I happened to see it again on a vintage vending machine outfit's web page, they had it up as a proud "restoration" they did... OMG what a disaster! they took this 100 year old antique, sand blasted it and then took BONDO and smeared it all over the entire surface and sanded it all smooth. The cast iron was sand cast, so it had texture and some minor defects, but these clowns wanted a new car in the showroom kind of bright, I mean BRIGHT red like the worst lipstick color you can imagine, super high gloss paint job on it. Then they painted ALL the raised lettering gold , it looked like a cheap plastic reproduction from China when they finished it, it was horrid! None of those pedestals were EVER painted like that when they were new in the 1920s, they were treated like light poles- painted with a medium, gloss red paint over primer, only the instructional lettering was painted with white paint nothing else, yet Ive seen more than a few such lousy "restorations" done on other models of these- ruining the original 100 year patina by sandblasting, applying super high gloss paints and then highlighting parts with gold paint and the like. I have an inner box some fool "restored" with powder coat paint, wrong shade of red, the brass was polished, some original screws were lost and replaced with the wrong kind, rivets on the hinges were removed to poish the brass and they put the hinges back on with machine screws. I wound up stripping all that powder coat paint off, repainting it, painting over the brass as was done originally, replacing the phillips head screws with the correct ones, and the missing rivets installed again. It's not perfect, but it's 100% better!
@RochelleHasTooManyHobbiesАй бұрын
@@HobbyOrganist I am SO sorry you had to see your old piece in that condition. I hope restoring the inner box gave you some piece sort of proxy peace... Maybe someone will fix the alarm pedestal in the future?
@yutt12 күн бұрын
4:01 The restoration label he removes is his own.
@Kit-Kat-1998Ай бұрын
It's a completely different painting without the overpaint!!! Seeing the eyes as they were intended is always my favorite part ❤
@karl.weaver11 күн бұрын
An absolute privilege to have viewed this wonderful restoration.
@luzarambula1862 ай бұрын
Hi Julian, it's been a min since I've last commented. I've been watching your videos for the better part of 3 years. Every time I see your videos, it's like I'm watching for the first time. You do such amazing work.
@BaumgartnerRestoration2 ай бұрын
Thanks, that's a really nice thing to say.
@marcusaurelius492 ай бұрын
This channel is a bastion of calm in an ever more terrible world. I needed this video.
@jonathancarter88372 ай бұрын
It's great to start my week with a new Baumgartner restoration!
@wrexgrafix842 ай бұрын
First time viewer here. I just wanted to say thank you for your professional and expert restoration/fixing work. I’m amazed at the various skills and knowledge you must have to be a fine art restoration artist.
@GJP1169Ай бұрын
A very skilled person makes what they do look easy but in reality it very difficult . You are a master in the art of restoration.
@russellwatts98772 ай бұрын
I know people focused on the hair but the artist talent in the facial skin tone amazing and Julian again you dont disappoint
@RochelleHasTooManyHobbiesАй бұрын
Well, unless the sitter asked for it, you can't exactly NOT copy his haircut as it is. I'm sure it was fashionable at the time.
@mnkid252 ай бұрын
Astounding. Just when I think I've seen it all...foam board! Cut outs! And then beauty, miraculous restoration, amazement. Thank you!
@DragonHeir922 ай бұрын
Now I understand Julian, you're the one to say to any of us with quiet sorrow "I'm so disappointed in you". And we will cry for DAYS.
@kamalani808Ай бұрын
I found myself holding my breath when you began removing the facing, dissolving the foam and then pulling the painting up from the board. The correct tools in the hands of a skilled artisan - amazing work!
@noalequinoaАй бұрын
I wonder if anything I’ll get to create in my lifetime will ever get afforded this amount of care, dedication, and precision. It’s really wonderful and sweet how much we, as a species, work to protect what mattered to those who came before.
@JillUdart2 ай бұрын
Watching your videos brings me PEACE in this argument/negative world.
@bonnie84412 ай бұрын
There are Master painters,and then there are absolute Master restorers!🥇
@marytataryn51442 ай бұрын
how many of us are comforted by the segment where he applies isolation layer?...and again, explains sweetly how it more accurately matches the colors he is about to use? oh my soul is at rest at this point. Why does this comfort me so?
@llchapman12342 ай бұрын
Because there is no ego, no yelling, no belittling. Just a man with a soothing voice fixing a mess while lovely music plays in the background. Paradise indeed 😊
@2degucitas2 ай бұрын
The colors just brighten and pop. We know he's on the home stretch and retouching is about to start. Such comfort and satisfaction.
@winkieblink76252 ай бұрын
I’m ALWAYS comforted by Julian’s voice.
@nmt2893Ай бұрын
I need more detail. I want to know what the isolation layer is. I'm here for the learning.
@2degucitasАй бұрын
@nmt2893 Before he retouches the damaged areas of the painting he brushes on a thin coat clear water based medium. It brightens the paints colors and allows a better matching retouch job. Any mistakes made can be washed off with water. When done he applies a layer of varnish over everything.
@kirktown2046Ай бұрын
Excellent video demonstrating all the hard work that goes into restoration. Easy to show to a potential employer that doesn't understand just how difficult and tedious and skillful this work is. Well put together, well written, well shot. Nice job mate, that's some sharp work.
@JerseyPup762 ай бұрын
Your mother used to work in my old high school’s art department! So cool that someone so successful could be this close
@nuancedmusings-ronneefullerton2 ай бұрын
Wow! Cool!
@seriouslyreally54132 ай бұрын
Your color matching and blending skills are remarkable. The close up of the camera lens testifies of your skill to recreate the image the artist painted before time and misfortune damaged it.
@maikuevang5402 ай бұрын
I really enjoy watching the removal process of the old restoration on this channel. The removal of the old retouch of poor restoration on portraits on this channel, reveals how many of the restorers flatten the portraits and nuanced details in faces that lose the character and personality of the person. On a technical level, it also demonstrates the restorers lack of understanding of basic painting or art . It’s refreshing and rewarding to see the new touch up done by Julian.
@tgh9652 ай бұрын
Watching your process start to finish never gets old. Thank you for the extra effort to bring us along.
@CarolynMcPherson-r3zАй бұрын
I would never have the patience to do this painstaking tedious work. Thank goodness you're here to do the impossible!
@cthompson3721Ай бұрын
"Whacher'gon'do is getcherself a rollergeurillertape and a foam board frum da'hobby lobby..." -Previous Conservator
@jeanmulhall43582 ай бұрын
Wow! Just the cleaning alone completely changed the look of the portrait. Julian you do amazing work
@b0rd3n2 ай бұрын
I agree, the cleaning made the paint pop! Removing the varnish and over paint left me sceptical about the idea of doing the work at all, the painting didn't look anything extraordinary but as you said... knowing and seeing it hadn't been cleaned was the ticket. Oh and i guess i can't judge for what is 'worth' to restore or not but i'm sure you understand what i meant.
@MommyDontSeeMe2 ай бұрын
The way just cleaning after removing the added paint - wow! The translucency of the subject's skin just glowed. Quite a difference!
@RamonaAnne2 ай бұрын
Coffee, knitting and Baumgartner. Monday mornings can be wonderful.
@DouglasHannayАй бұрын
A true master at work. Mr. Baumgartner makes it look easy, the sign of a highly skilled conservator. Bravo! I take my hat off to him.
@scumonkey2 ай бұрын
What a joy to watch a consummate professional perform his magic! you are an artist in your own right- stellar job!!
@BrW52 ай бұрын
Can we talk about that knife flip at 3:47
@IanWatson2 ай бұрын
Wow, that previous conservator made a mess of things. Incredible transformation! Throughout most of it, I couldn't even tell that there was anything other than flat black for his jacket, waistcoat and bowtie. I thought it might just be a result of the overpaint, but I see from the comparison at the end that it might have just been the lighting. Great stuff!
@ASpectacular37772 ай бұрын
How you filled in the holes / missing pieces amazes me. That looks so difficult! Your work is ASTOUNDING. SUPERB.
@AquaticCoffeeАй бұрын
Truly a master of his craft. Being able to identify an adhesive just by smelling it, and quickly working around it is an impressive level of skill. Whether it's familiarity or just a unique smell is still astounding.
@GreatGreebo2 ай бұрын
The disdain in Julian’s voice for the *foam board* being used as a restoration material is palpable. Another excellent restoration, thank you.
@jaymiedivinagracia1977Ай бұрын
It was dripping with disdain when he said "foam board"
@coopertrost38162 ай бұрын
Im a physician/Surgeon. We often say "if you don't have surgical complications, you arent operating enough." That is to say, every surgeon has complications. The reason i say this, I'm curious if you could speak to or show any of the "mishaps" that you've had or pieces that have come back to you that have broken down differently or earlier than expected. fixes that didn't hold up that you did and how you handled them.
@ava-nr8xs2 ай бұрын
in another video, julien has mentioned how he once glued a painting to the hot table because he didnt use any release film lol
@gabrielaguzman11762 ай бұрын
I don't think he would talk or do a video about it, after all we saw in the last video (the one restoring the portrait of one of his relatives) how his channel works as his marketing, I doubt he would talk about the times he failed, aside from a couple humorous mentions like the one with the hot table. But I agree it would be pretty interesting
@coopertrost38162 ай бұрын
@@gabrielaguzman1176 I definitely get that, i would feel the same way. I wouldnt want to show careless mistakes. i know even experienced plumbers have leaky pipes sometimes despite being very careful and doing it the exact same way every time. My patients occasionally (luckily very rarely) get infections after surgery despite me being meticulous and using abx etc. For this field im curious where the usual fail points are if there are any.
@BaumgartnerRestoration2 ай бұрын
@@coopertrost3816 Well, you've really seen a bunch of them if you watch my videos... poor materials, wrong approaches and lousy technique are all to blame...
@nrml762 ай бұрын
This is probably not the best forum for that discussion as it might convey the wrong impression to potiental clients who are not well informed. They (conservators) probably do that on coservators private forums for learning.
@dawsie2 ай бұрын
The horrific damage that had been done to that painting, only to find as you were cleaning off all of their overpainted layer to discover they had not even cleaned the original painting properly 🤦🏽♀️ My mind wonders at how many other paintings this person has mutilated in their quest of restoration. Seeing the eyes come alive as you were cleaning off the over painting was one thing but when you realised the portrait had not even been cleaned and you set to cleaning the grime away his eyes suddenly began to show a life of their own and the person he once was could be seen again. I have always loved seeing the before and after restoration and love the fact you only replace what was missing never replacing what is already there.
@LittleGreenSoldier2 ай бұрын
I mean, if someone is going to do a terrible overpaint, at least doing it on top of the dirt makes it easy to remove!
@convivator2 ай бұрын
I love how he is always keeping his shirts perfectly clean, no matter what.
@tamaranelson2482Ай бұрын
I love watching you work. Your skills to take a piece of damage art and restore it to its original state or better is amazing.
@budzillasohoski9858Ай бұрын
Wow! I couldn’t have matched those colors so well with Photoshop!!! What an astounding job. I really appreciate the respect you have for the original artist. I can feel you saying “this is how he/she wanted it to look” instead of just painting over it quickly the way “you” might want it to look. You are a true master. Bravo. I am absolutely floored.
@xerodeus23372 ай бұрын
I love the gentle jabs at past "conservation" efforts lol. What an amazing turn out for this one!
@mnf21392 ай бұрын
Ooh, beautiful restoration as usual. Recalled that one "Restorer trying to fixed that poor woman's face! Glad they're all back to what they're intended to look like originally
@Fastball1152 ай бұрын
Never get tired of watching you retouch a painting. The matching of colors and gradations is amazing to me. Well done!
@macformeАй бұрын
Julian Baumgartner you are the maestro, a cognoscente and a genius of restorations. It is like magic that you can restore these art works without a trace. I am stunned every time a watch your videos ... your skill knows no limit!!!!
@UmbyWatchАй бұрын
With this restoration, you have outdone yourself! Complete mastery of colorimetry! 👋👋👋👋👋
@parthasarathikondapure86312 ай бұрын
oh boy, this is gonna be good. bring in the popcorn!
@random_dragon2 ай бұрын
I got it! 🍿🍿🍿🍿🍿🍿🍿🍿🍿🍿
@tlwalker1962Ай бұрын
I am an engineer, I design incredible machines. I know nothing of art. But holy smokes, you took garbage and made it look original again. I sit here wondering what the painting looked like when it was just finished?
@OddOne25111 күн бұрын
When describing yourself, you forgot "modest"...... 🤦🏼♂️ 🤣
@anngelikablomqvist65912 ай бұрын
WoW. The work you put into this painting. Just wow
@quanchyplimpАй бұрын
What incredible patience and knowledge this guy has. Bravo!!
@jarekjagielski36627 күн бұрын
It never ceases to blow my mind just how much knowledge is needed for something like this. Chemistry, history, carpentry, physics... not to mention most of the time there is no "Try again" option.
@JonBrownShermanАй бұрын
This man is truly an artist in so many different ways. Just incredible.
@serifpersia2 ай бұрын
Legit watched every second of this. Piano music makes it nice to watch as well. You do expect the end result but the journey to get to it as much fun as seeing the result of hard work he did. Huge respect.
@micheleblanck46932 ай бұрын
You have rescued the painting from the “rescuers”. Beautifully done.
@baba678Ай бұрын
What a master. Pleasure watching this guy work, takes great humility to not let one’s creativity overwrite the original art!
@annarrogance27 күн бұрын
It is absolutely INCREDIBLE how, even with that crack still visible down the center of the face, just removing the previous overpainting and cleaning it makes the painting look 1000% better. I’m really glad the algorithm recommended me this video-it’s fascinating watching you work and to see how these paintings are repaired and restored. Can’t wait to finish the video and see the final product. 😊 New fan here!
@Richard-vw8no2 ай бұрын
Julian's work never gets old.
@CallieMasters50002 ай бұрын
...but the paintings do. He's shown successful restorations that have come back years later with holes in them or other problems for him to correct.
@user-bf8ud9vt5b2 ай бұрын
Are you suggesting that his repairs don't last? 😉
@DS321o2 ай бұрын
Your channel is the perfect intersection between art and science which is why I love it. Have you ever ruined a painting?
@PaulaBean2 ай бұрын
No painting so ruined that it can't be restored 🤪
@bentinho2 ай бұрын
That's interesting. I used to work at a national photo lab/services company and mounted quite a number of photos to that black foam board. If I recall it has an adhesive layer on top of a thin plastic-ky layer. Nice work getting that off!
@Lighting_DeskАй бұрын
It gives me such joy watching an old painting come back to life and even be restored to near the original state it was intended.
@jakefoley9539Ай бұрын
The work you do might as well be magic as far as I'm concerned. Incredible.
@Fearmocker2 ай бұрын
What’s crazy is I tried to watch another conservator and only got a couple of minutes into it before I was say “wtf are doing?!” And left lolol. You’ve ruined me Julian!
@dbevry34242 ай бұрын
Same. Was constantly asking the other video 'why are you doing it that way? '
@29lookingood2 ай бұрын
Same 🤭👍🏾💙
@danaondrackova34312 ай бұрын
I cant watch any other conservating video bcs they took a giant piece of wool and just dipped it in the solvant and smothered the painting in it to remove varnish. I was horrified.
@althenia672 ай бұрын
Same here!! I am now totally biased. Lol
@anthonyi65722 ай бұрын
Same here. I don’t even try watching someone else. Watching Julian is quite calming, the others, not so much. 😂
@KaiyaCorrbin2 ай бұрын
Not only is Julian a master of restoration, he is quite a fine carpenter!
@claredriscoll50922 ай бұрын
Julian, have you ever been contacted by a previous conservator defending his/her efforts on a painting you re-conserved?
@pants64162 ай бұрын
If I was the guy who did this one previously, I'd cease to exist out of sheer embarrassment.
@DaleDix2 ай бұрын
He seems to be the guy would have an answer for everything and you would feel worse at the end of the day
@mossyslopesАй бұрын
Judging by their previous choice of materials it would be a sharply worded, handwritten note - written on a deflated balloon with colored chalk 😂
@TG_816 күн бұрын
I’ve watched a number of painting restorations and have been impressed, but this is by far the best I’ve seen. Everything down to the texture of the canvas is phenomenal. Bravo, sir.
@furrylucy28 күн бұрын
Always amazed at what an incredible job he does on all the retouching. Perfection.
@dolphin645752 ай бұрын
I'm doing a painting involving some book spines, and trying to match a bright light teal with acrylics is WAY harder than you make it seem with archival paints! Plus, I figured out 3 tries in that acrylics dry darker 😢 finally got it on the 6th attempt!
@morph-the-cat2 ай бұрын
I was a bit obsessed with this channel last year haha. One thing that stuck with me is the idea of giving yourself a little win, i.e. tackling a rewarding aspect first. I use that approach with lots of things now.
@wendymorrison56192 ай бұрын
It's the theory my therapist gave me. Pick an achievable task. Start. Finish it. Praise yourself. And start again.
@LJB-me2 ай бұрын
What does Julian call it? “Low hanging fruit”
@morph-the-cat2 ай бұрын
@LJB-me ahhh yes that's it!!!
@jahjoeka2 ай бұрын
Wow. That was amazing. Guy knows like 5 different systems in order to master his kraft, very inspiring.
@kayleigh7828Ай бұрын
I was stunned when you cleaned up the grime, such beautiful colours shining through! Thank you so much for sharing your work.
@stevet9418Ай бұрын
This is one of the most satisfying videos I have ever watched! The level of skill on display here is off the chart.
@NonLegitNation22 ай бұрын
14:06 200 years from now "who was this amateur why didn't he use ai powered nano adhesive, this gossamer is so archaic." 🤣
@katrinkabuttlin2 ай бұрын
You just made my Monday morning SO much better 🎉
@dlcarriere2 ай бұрын
re: working on the hot table ... Did you know that winter gloves not only keep cold out, they can help keep heat out. Next time you're working on a project like this, have a pair of winter gloves with you. You might only need one glove for the hand holding the painting to keep from burning yourself.
@BaumgartnerRestoration2 ай бұрын
I’ll get myself a pair of Freezy freaky’s
@Coosacat22 күн бұрын
This is amazing. Like magic! It is fascinating to watch you work, and I'm learning about stuff that I never knew existed.
@buresdvАй бұрын
These videos are awesome. I always wanted to work with visual art and paintings, but I’m colorblind, so it wasn’t meant to be. Thank you for giving us insight into your craft.