Hmm, looking at it again, I see the face scaling questionability. My points would be:
1. White balance on boy on left looks different to baby and older boy. Seems cooler
2. The level of the cushion on the back of the chair is different a la Mona Lisa on either side of the boy on the right - this could just be a play of positioning mind you.
How are we doing?
You people on the forum here noticed everything I was wondering about, i. e. why I asked.
What do you mean by a 'play of positioning'?
To start with, this copy of the image is way way too low resolution to be certain whether there were any significant alterations done, period.
960x720 is the highest resolution I have but for future reference with other images, what resolution do you recommend people obtain images in? Thanks for telling me about resolution. I thought 960x720 would be good enough. I admit I don't know much about photography.
Things that came purely from color balance and density decisions during scanning isn't the kind of alteration I'm talking about. But that is a type of alteration, good point.
You talked about Photoshop 3.0 being in the header. Looking at it, I also see 'FB' in the header. Processed by Facebook, I thought? I uploaded a different photo to facebook today to test this, and it completely reworked the header and put both 'FB' and 'Photoshop 3.0' in it! I wasn't expecting that.
It looks like facebook runs people's photos through a batch process with really old Photoshop from the 90's for compression. That's crummy.
EDIT: I just found out facebook, for a long time, had a default max image size of 960x720 unless the uploader remembered to hit the high quality switch, so if it went through facebook, someone could have uploaded a file with a higher resolution but facebook cut it down.
Close examination shows very uniform noise patterns. If any retouching was done, it was done on a much higher resolution copy before downsampling to this small size and conversion to JPEG from the original scanner format, probably TIFF.
But no retouching was done at this resolution, anyway. Good to know, thanks. How high would the resolution have to have been, do you estimate?
Global (that is, uniform across the entire image) adjustments for color and densities could have been applied when the scanned image was done. The image looks like the original film or print had faded and some correction has been done, though better correction is likely possible.
What is 'better correction' as opposed to 'some correction'?