40 Old Colorized Photos That Might Change The Way You Perceive History By Sebastien De Oliveira (New Pics)
Interview With ArtistLooking at old black-and-white photos, have you ever wondered what people and things were really like back then? Well, of course, nowadays we have a lot of easily accessible sources providing us with all the information we need. However, it is probably impossible to fully understand a period in which we didn't exist yet.
To give you a better idea of the reality back in the day, we want to show you some works of Sebastien de Oliveira. He is an illustrator and a photographer who can resurrect the past in new colors. Literally. With the help of Photoshop, the artist colorizes old photos, giving them more life.
For more of Sebastien's colorized pictures, check out our previous post here.
More info: Instagram
This post may include affiliate links.
A Woman Driving A Sports Car Around Hollywood With Thor The Great Dane Riding Shotgun, 1961. Photographed By Ralph Crane
same - I'm a simple person. If there's a dog involved I like it.
Load More Replies...A long long time age we had a Dobie that enjoyed riding shotgun like this. As we had a MG-TD he was sitting on the left side. Peeps had something like, wtf..................look that dog is driving!
... you could add a toy steering wheel to make it look even more so ... and get people upset by, say, asking for directions and demand that you ask, but they have to answer the dog. After all, doggo's driving, you know, him you gotta tell where to turn and stuff ... just make sure he's emptied himself before driving - if he don't see a tree and gotta go, he's way too much into speeding!
Load More Replies...Bored Panda got in touch with Sebastien again to get to know more about him and his creative process. The artist shared that he is nearly at a thousand images colorized by now! That's an impressive number, so we got curious about whether his colorizing technique has changed over time. The artist replied that after the first three years where he was experimenting, he needed to crystallize the process in order to be liberated from the "how to do it" and to concentrate on the choices of colors or the general atmospheres he wanted to show.
"My technique is polished now so basically I don’t need to think about it. It doesn’t mean I don’t make efforts to improve it but the more technical parts are completely automatic for me now, so I really only think about the artistic choices and the ways to go further on the time machine effect."
Frida Kahlo On A Small Boat At Xochimilco, Mexico, Photographed In 1936
I've never seen this photo, this is photo of Frida Kahlo which I see for the first time.
Amelia Earhart, Photographed In 1932
One current theory is that she crashed and eventually starved or died of wounds on a small island, and then her remains were eaten and scattered by coconut crabs. It's morbid but seems promising.
Load More Replies...... she was actually quite stunning... Tragic loss when we loose someone beautiful both inside and out
Yeah but that's not the point. It's a picture of her and only her so why mention the other crew members?
Load More Replies...Sebastien colorizes images that depict people, actions, or feelings and when they tell a little story: "I see the possibilities in the original image, also with basic elements like trees, sea, or sand, to already imagine what color it will be and try to figure out a way to equilibrate the future colorization. I always go to see the Library of Congress and the FSA collection, of course, but I can be inspired by other Instagram accounts that give me ideas, like @classy_badasssery for instance, that have lots of cool images. Otherwise, it is just during random surfing on the internet. It is rare that people give me an image to colorize but it has happened, and it’s always a joy to see people seeing their ancestors in color for the first time!"
Photographer Harry Adams Stands With A Young Woman In Front Of His Barbershop. Los Angeles, 1956
Brigitte Bardot In A Boat, 1959
Brigitte Bardot would have been gorgeous in a burlap sack. Some people are blessed in ways that I cannot imagine.
Brigitte Bardot is an awful, utterly racist, horrible white supremacist and it's certainly something she's proud of to proclaim to all far-right organisations. A pretty package filled with manure is still manure. She doesn't deserve to be mentioned on a positive site like BoredPanda. There are so many examples of kindness, intelligence, empathy and beauty deserving to be mentioned instead of Blondie. Examples: Henrietta Lacks, people like mine and others' parents giving us a future against all odds (mine fled with us after surviving the genocide against Chechens, two wars and dictatorship thanks to the likes of Pootin and his powerful buddies, or: other ethnicities suffering while the world very easily and conveniently ignores their anguish), all those on the Covid-19 frontline, William Wilberforce, the Gulabi Gang and so, so many others.
You're right. I was getting ready to make a similar comment. She also criticized women in Hollywood who have been victims of sexual assault. Basically saying sexual assault is part of the job and they should suck it up and take it.
Load More Replies...She was physically pretty and yet a vile human towards other humans. She was a lover of animals and advocated for animal rights though. Still doesn't excuse her treatment of people. See link for details. She's been fined numerous times for racism. https://themadameblue.com/blog/why-you-should-stop-idolizing-brigitte-bardot/
Sebastien revealed that until now, colorizing was only a hobby that he was taking "way too seriously". "My real job is a retoucher for the fashion industry in Paris. I can take some commissions if the subjects and the images are interesting. I just began a collaboration with the magazine France-Amérique in New York for illustrating an article. Recently colorization took a bigger place in my occupations."
Manis The Orangutan And Clint Eastwood, Behind The Scenes Of The Film "Every Which Way But Loose " By James Fargo (1978)
Wish we had more colorized photos from the ‘70s. What a vibrant time.
Clyde was allegedly beaten to death by his trainer shortly after filming finished. Like most apes who are made to perform his story was not a pleasant one. Watching these animals perform on YouTube or TikTok continues to support the illegal pet trade and some truly vicious animal management techniques which include electrocution, pulling teeth out and beatings. When apes get too big to manage they are nearly always destroyed.
There is no Clyde. Manis was not beaten to death. It was another orangutan named Buddha.
Load More Replies...Hal And Betty Takier, Jitterbug Dancing 1938
I’m impressed the crowd was integrated since all the Jim Crow laws were still in effect in 1938
they take a good guess (usually right) based on the of shade of gray.
Load More Replies...Sebastien makes everything on Photoshop. Here's how he describes his process: "the process is quite simple and complex at the same time, first restoring the original monochrome image, cleaning the dust and scratches and preparing it to receive the color layer. Second, creating paths to be able to select all the different elements in the image means spending time on clipping. After that, the moment arrives to choose the colors to put on top of the black and white image. The fourth step will be my special treatment, I take a scale of five grey and I color it in a way to give every tone of color a different orientation. For making it simple, the same color will be more blue in the dark and more yellow in the light, it gives a natural tone to the image. Other settings are required for giving the color a more saturated and solid aspect. I finish with a color grain in the overall surface of the image to give another argentic aspect."
February 9, 1927. Washington, D.c. Miss Grace Wagner, Central High School
I wish more secondary schools still offered shop classes and home skills classes.
Same. I don’t get why now it’s some voc school class. We loved shop and home ec when we went to middle/high school - they replaced recess.
Load More Replies...Those in the background seem to have feminine features. An entire class would seem reasonable.
Load More Replies...On pictures like this of women doing mechanic work I always love the artfully and fully artificial grease smears on the cheeks. It's not even smeared at a believable angle, obviously put there by someone in front of her and not by her own hand. (Try it - put something on your finger and wipe it onto your cheek. It won't look like that)
Do they not now? I think the community colleges all do. Not state colleges or universities so much though. Sad.
Home Economics and Shop were 'offered' when I was in Junior High, as it was called back in the 60's.
Load More Replies...Marilyn Monroe In The Henry Hathaway's Film "Niagara", 1953
"You've got to start laying plans for a dress like that when you're thirteen."
Great Movie. MM was never really valued for her considerable talent. She was more than the sum of her beauty.
This movie was made in color. They didn't colorize a black and white photo. It was in Cinemascope and was a BIG deal in 1953.
Not sure what the point is here. The movie was released in colour and That Dress has always been pink, not purple, as you can see in this clip of the infamous "Kiss" scene: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aDIvP2nyb2E
"With all the different aspects of the process, it can take quite some time to colorize a picture but it really depends on the subject. If it is only a portrait with no complicated background it can be only an hour and if it is a street with cars and people it can be several hours. My job as a retoucher gave me the dexterity of working quite fast, it is what happened when you work on the same program for 8 hours a day for the last 18 years."
James Dean Signs Autographs In His Car In Marfa, Texas, Photographed By Richard C. Miller, In July 1955
Black/White or Colored, James Dean was very photogenic, and one handsome man!
Back in my day, couples would drive to secluded areas and have make-out sessions. We called this "parking". This is the perfect car to "park" in, and the perfect guy to make out with.
Actress Cathy O'donnell, 1945. Photographed By Martha Holmes For Life And Time Pictures
The artist also shared that his book "Back to America!" has just been released in France! "I worked on it from the beginning of the year and it compiles 180 colorized images from the ’40s. It is such a great accomplishment for me that now I have difficulties imagining what will happen after that, another book maybe, other collaborations for articles, it seems to be only the beginning of the adventure."
If you're interested, you can order the book here.
Parisians On A Bus, Photographed In 1951
France didn't have a segregation system. There was racism but it wasn't institusionalized. The goal of the french politic at the time was assimilation. Not better if you ask me but less visible
Load More Replies...Anonymous Couple Photographed In 1942
This is so killing my time-travel vibe. Always thought I was born in wrong time. Want to be in my 20s in the 1940s. But seeing that there was actually color then is sucking the life out of me - I look so much better in black & white.
This looks a lot like my grandparents. Dead ringer for my grandmother.
I have a photo of my grandmother when she was young sitting in a car just like this lady is. Classic pose!
Richmond, Virginia, Circa 1908
Wow. That's crazy to think how recent this was in the scheme of things and how different everything is now!
Yes! This blows my mind thinking that it was in the 20th century - albeit the beginning of the century.
Load More Replies...Any man in that photograph 43 or older was born into slavery. It wasn't that long ago.
How smart they are! Waistcoats and trilbies, even for street traders. Clothes maketh the men.
That's what food used to look like before mass agriculture stripped the soil, and killed it with pesticides, herbicides and fungicides and chemical fertilizers
This picture I think does the most justice for this article. The black and white photo looks like it's from 100 years ago but the color picture looks like it could have been taken yesterday, just with differences in clothing and such. It's so interesting to be able to show my 10 year old stuff like this.
The colored picture totally changes (and improves) the perspective of this scene.
Actress Katharine Hepburn, 1907-2003. Photographed By Alfred Eisenstaedt In 1937
She’s all fine and dandy but I can’t take my eyes off the leather chair 😍
You're acting like you can't still go and see the original picture. They didn't ruin anything. You need to chill.
Load More Replies...Veteran Soldier Of Napoleon With His Old Uniform On The Anniversary Of Napoleon's Death. Photographed In 1858
At the time soldiers didn’t have camo and take cover in a battle. They were in formation, marched up to the enemy and started firing their muskets in order. So some uniforms were very ornate, especially if they were an elite unit like a Guards.
Load More Replies...They weren't worn by the regular soldier but only by high ranking officers who were in the back
This is a Sergeant not a officer. And these uniforms were worn in the field just look up paintings of waterloo.
Load More Replies...That hat was definitely made for people with a Napoleon complex! I know a few people that could use that hat today!
The colored picture personifies the military position of this gentleman.
La gloire de guerre! Now we're like "What a waste of life!" Still looks great though, which is probably one reason they did it. To get the girls.
Serously . . . Is the red feather on his helmet to catch the eye of snipers?
Diane Keaton And Al Pacino On The Set Of The Godfather By Francis Ford Coppola In 1972
It's kind of weird to colorize a photo from 1972, when color film was ubiquitous.
Not if the photo was taken in black and white film.
Load More Replies...I believe she may have had a thing for him in real life
Load More Replies...If the film was shot in color, why were the publicity stills in black and white?
I don't know why you were downvoted, I was wondering the same thing. Maybe a stylistic decision? Maybe because not all tabloids would have been in colour yet? I don't know, but I'd like to know.
Load More Replies...I'm finding the colorized pics more comfortable. I appreciate black&white, but a creature of my times I guess.
Couple Kissing In The Front Seat Of A Convertible Car At A Drive-In Movie. Photographed In 1945
I love the colour of her coat. Wish they'd make more colourful outerwear nowadays, I'm not yet ready to sew a coat...
What gets me is the size of her bag of snacks. I can't tell if it's popcorn or candy, but it's tiny compared to modern movie snacks (at least in America).
I know whenever I went to the drive in I always left the driver's door open...
it's not just open. It's gone. And that's a lot of light on them. all staged for a cool photo
Load More Replies...Soldier And His Girlfriend Waiting For A Train At Chicago Union Station, Photographed By Jack Delano In February 1943
Wow, I didn't know those types of cute boots have been around for a long time!
They've been around longer than that. You should check out the history of women's shoes. You'd be surprised how the same styles continuously circle.
Load More Replies...Marlon Brando Photographed By Ed Clark In 1949
I've heard he was very eccentric. Very unpredictable and off the rocker. He was handsome but he was a little off.
Load More Replies...Students Of The University Of Maryland Photographed In 1923
your comment made me look at their smiles again which made me smile!
Load More Replies...Almost 100 years ago, but I’m sure their experience in that moment is same as it would have been today. Crazy to think about!
Not sure I agree, women were not encouraged to go to college, infact it was frowned upon. So for these women it would have been an experience of a life time. I think too many young people take for granted the privilege of going to college now days. Or more to the point it is just expected that you will go to college or not have a real life. Which is sad.
Load More Replies...Smiles yada yada i like looking at old photos not for smiles just to see how ugly we humans was 100 years ago wow they are not good lookin but hey smiles everyone
Model Wearing Suse Dannenburg 'Jezebel' Sweater, Photographed By Nina Leen For Life Magazine, 1947
There's a lot of dupes for this sweater in the pinup community if you look
Load More Replies...WRONG, the sweater was black, do your fashion research. THE SWEATER WAS BLACK, its a famous sweater.
WRONG, the sweater came in a variety of colors, all hand knitted, with the one constant being the color of the applique. Do your fashion research before slamming someone's work. https://www.vintag.es/2021/02/suse-sweaters.html
Load More Replies...look at the buttons on the shirt ann sheridan wore in the man who came to dinner in 1942
Drought Refugees, California, Photographed By Dorothea Lange In February 1936
Many of the styles of the 1960s and later were taken from outfits worn by laborers of earlier decades. Denim was not leisure wear in the 1930s, it was what farmhands and factory workers wore. It is the same way that many stylish boots today are based on the way that work shoes and work boots were cut in the past. Finally, the 1960s and on, thrifting became a thing. That jacket that the girl is wearing was a typical stylish upper middle class jacket for a wealthier girl - it only looks modern because only since the 1960s has this type of jacket been worn with denim.
Load More Replies...She lived across the street from my grandparents. Amazing photojournalist.
things keep going the way they are there might be future series of photographs for "drought refugees from the American Southwest, photographed 2036"
Not even sure it'll be that far. If things do not change out here.....maybe 10 years.
Load More Replies...They look so unhappy. That's not the right word.... more like exhausted and beaten...not physically but emotionally.
The clothing definitely suprised me for this time period. It looks more modern than 1936, minus the car behind them.
In a very round-about way…total over-farming. It’s how humans learned about soil-preservation.
Load More Replies...whenever I see photos like this I often wonder - what happened to these folks? What's their story? Did that young girl on the right meet , marry and raise a family? Or maybe she caught a break and was able to go to college and embark on a professional career? She looks around 13 or 14 or so, she would have been an adult during WW2. - did she serve in the military?, That little baby could very well still be alive - what's his or her story? The questions are endless.
Taxi Driver, Place Pigalle, 1958. Photographed By Paul Almasy
Folies Pigalle was still open 15 years ago, as a night club somewhat trash ( lot of drugs fond behind the bar led to its closing by justice) It was a crazy place though by the time ( Miss Trans contest, with candidates dancing in suspended cages for instance)
Uhhhh the French have a reputation for being too free anyway. Don't be a drag.
Load More Replies...Marilyn Monroe And Jane Russell Photographed On The Set Of "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes", Around 1953
8th Of October 1963: British Actor Sean Connery Lounges On A Sofa With A Cigarette
He was one of the most handsome men on Earth, and a damn good actor too!
Photographed In 1936 By The French Photographer Pierre Jamet
Come out of the water looking like a baby in an over-filled diaper.
Load More Replies...Photographed By Pierre Jamet In 1936
Not 1936. More like the late 1950s to early 1960s. Though very modest two-piece bathing suits were around before WWII, bikinis weren’t a style until after the war, and the early ones had waist-high bottoms. Bikini bottoms below the belly button didn’t start appearing on beaches—-and were still banned completely in some countries—-until at least 1958 or later. By the mid-1960s, the Baby Boom generation embraced bikinis, and they started becoming more accepted and common (though grudgingly by older generations).
If it says 'photographed 1936' then it would be safe to assume it was 1936. I mean the bikini was invented in France. Like someone suggested, maybe a performer.
Load More Replies...April 17, 1935. Pontiac Convertible Coupe At Tanforan Racetrack, San Bruno
Replaced by a mall in 1971. The very mall where I spent most of my teenage years hanging out. I even ended up working at the Sears there for about 15 years. There was a statue of Seabiscuit just in front of the entrance to The Emporium (later a Target) on the lower level, which is now in the parking lot near the main mall entrance. The mall, now known as The Shops at Tanforan, will be demolished next year.
I grew up there, too. My family spent every Friday night having dinner at Walgreens (yes, it was a store just like a modern Walgreens but also had a small restaurant with sit-down, booth seating)... and then off to the Tanforan movie theater.
Load More Replies...Became a Japanese-American internment camp just a few years after this picture. In the 70's became a shopping mall, now slatted to be torn down and a biotech campus built on the site.
Miss Lenora Rivero With Anthony Jannus In Rex Smith Aeroplane, 1911
What could possibly go wrong? Her legs are safely strapped to the wafer thin wooden frame by a tiny piece of cotton tea towel.
No, her dress is bound so that it does not blow open when the plane flies. Modesty before safety.
Load More Replies...Her " seat" looks like it was made out of some dead branches they found laying around the field.
Which is exactly the right response to being on an airplane in 1911.
Load More Replies...It took some guts to climb in one of those Flying Crates! It looks like her legs are tied together. And the safety instructions were "Hang on for dear life!"
Relax. Once we leave the ground and fly higher than 99.99% of the human race in all of history on an erector set covered with thin vellum powered by a leaking smoking spewing bucket of trespass with a whirly whig just waiting to chew us to bits if we lose our grip and fall backwards. How is your hand strength? You climbed trees before, right? Just wait until we feel the wind in our face... faster and colder than we have ever felt it before. Sweetheart, I am going to warn you. If that hat flies off, just let that damn thing fly off. In fact, just toss it on the ground right now, we'll pick it up later. Allright, let her rip!
It took a surprisingly long time for aircraft seats to catch on, despite their widespread use in passenger trains for decades . .
Surprising number of people fell out, including pilots, seat belts and seats were for wussies.
Load More Replies...You almost hear the piano music that would accompany a silent film of the era,looking at this picture. Daring
Elegant Thérèse Bonney, Taking The Train, With Vuitton Luggage, 1928
That knit suit actually looks really comfortable, yet still really polished and stylish.
Been a few. Murder on the Orient Express, is just one of many.
Load More Replies...Lauren Bacall, Photographed In 1942
She was still a teenager then, yet so poised and confident looking.
The sensual subtlety of the shading on Lauren in b&w is lost in the saturated colorizing.
American Women Workers Serving Algerian Fusiliers With Sandwiches At The American Red Cross Military Canteen At Juvisy, 1918
Gotta love the woman looking straight at the camera. She's like "Go away" but with a smile
Little Fisherman, Gloucester, Massachusetts, Photographed By Howard Liberman In September 1942
B&W is iconic. Colorizing diminishes "stature" of subject(s). Not true in EVERY case but most.
Man Changing A Tire, New York, Photographed In 1946 By Stanley Kubrick
Damn. That taxi is basically made completely out of bondo! Lol. That's funny. Guess ppl in New York were just as bad at driving back then as they are now!
By the looks of that car, you can see this guy is a typical driver in New York.
Robert De Niro Photographed On The Set Of The Film "Taxi Driver" By Martin Scorcese, 1976
Central Park Lake On A Sunday, New York, Photographed By Marjory Collins In September 1942
It is so wild seeing people in suits and dresses hanging out at the lake.
Great day to look at random articles on your phone when there are kids starving in Africa and Ukraine is under attack 🙄 people need to be given time to relax. This was a weekend, a chance to decompress on a day off work and a chance to not think about the war
Load More Replies...College Boys Trying To "Thumb" A Ride Home Over The Weekend, Near Natchitoches, Louisiana. Photographed By Marion Post Wolcott In June 1940
For those wondering how to say the name of this town, it's "nack-uh-dish."
My husband is from Louisiana and it took me forever to learn to pronounce that!
Load More Replies...I think it's probably the sky colorized that's a strong comanality.
That was a time when it was still safe to be a hitchhiker, and someone who picked up hitchhikers.
Nope, you just didn't know about the many people who weren't safe. People haven't gotten worse, there's just better documentation of their crimes.
Load More Replies...A Norwegian Sailor And An Oswego Girl On A Hayride During Unites Nations Week, Oswego, New York. Photographed By Marjory Collins In June 1943
Okay... With this last picture... Is it just me or, with few exceptions, does anyone else thing that the 2010's and 2020's has brought back a lot of 40's and 50's era styles... Like I did not see any clothing styles that would not fit today, either for everyday or for special occasion...
Couple Kissing At The Cinema, Photographed By Weegee In 1943
And the guy two seats down is more interested in the couple than in the movie.
Load More Replies...My thoughts exactly. Probably after being on the sticky cinema floor 🤮
Load More Replies...Washington, D.c., Circa 1861. Guards At The Ferry Landing On Mason's Island Examining A Pass. Taken By George N. Barnard
Actress Louise Brooks Lounging On A Large Armchair. Photographed By Eugene Robert Richee In 1928
Massachusetts Bathing Girls, Revere Beach 1946
Mrs. Bliven In Auto, Washington, D.c., 1908
Because Mrs. Bliven wanted her auto in red color.
Load More Replies...Is there more than one inner tube in those tires? Those are valves, between the spokes, right?
Writer Rose Lee, Working At Her Desk, Photographed In 1941
Soldiers And A Girl At The Fun Fair, Paris, 1960, Photographed By Paul Almasy
Two legionnaires one in parade uniform and the other in combat fatigues. Don't know wat the naval uniform is.
August 4, 1938. Washington, D.c. Miss Dorothy Parker Has Been Selected As Miss Washington And Will Compete For The Title Of Miss America At The Atlantic City Beauty Pageant
I love how she looks like a giantress compared to the 3 guys on the top platform. 😁
Please tell me she isn't going to jump off the diving board wearing high heels...
Fair enough, I couldn't climb a ladder in those shoes
Load More Replies...Washington, D.c., Circa 1917
February 1940. Basketball Players, Eufaula, Oklahoma. Photo By Russell Lee
They could barely afford enough cloth to cover their unmentionables!
Load More Replies...Clifford Shorts And His Family, Aliquippa, Pennsylvania, Photographed By Arthur Rothstein In July 1938
Vicki Wood, The Fastest Woman On The Beach In The Late 1950s And Early 1960s
In my day "fast" meant something else so I did not see the woman in the foreground (pink dress) first 🤭 Oops
French Actor Jean-Paul Belmondo, Having A Break During The Filming Of "Breathless " From Jean-Luc Godard, Paris, 1960
Girls Listening To Music, Circa 1960
Fort Worth, Texas. View Of Main Street Photographed By Arthur Rothstein In January 1942
Construction Workers On The Porch Of A Local Boarding House Near Fort Benning, Columbus, Georgia. Photographed By Marion Post Wolcott In December 1940
Fort Worth, Texas. Meacham Field. Students And Instructor. Control Tower In The Background. Photographed By Arthur Rothstein In January 1942
Christmas Shopping Crowds, Gadsden, Alabama, Photographed By John Vachon In December 1940
Civilians And Soldiers Of The Royal Army. Medical Corps Distributing Refreshments The Wounded British In France, 1916
If I’m ever injured I hope a hoard of people don’t gather round to gawp at me…
December 1940. Grocery Store Window In Bath, Maine
Let's just hope that lamb fores doesn't continue round the corner reading skins
Load More Replies...Saint Mary’s Count, Maryland. People Going To All Faith Church. Photographed By Marjory Collins In July 1942
Meet The "World’s Strongest Seventh Grader" April Atkins 12 Years, Photographed By Loomis Dean In 1954
Lauren Bacall 1924-2014
Sunbathers At The Swimming Pool, Greenbelt, Maryland. Photographed By Marjory Collins In June 1942
Two Girls Sunbathing At The Revere Beach, Massachusetts, Photographed By Leslie Jones In 1937
Street View Of New York, Photographed By Pierre Chapo In 1956
Cars Of Steelworkers Leaving Mill, Midland, Pennsylvania, USA, Jack Delano, January 1940
A General View Of A Street Leading To The Depot Of The Atchison, Topeka, And Santa Fe Railroad, Needles, California, Photographed By Jack Delano In March 1943
Dr. Mccarl As A Chairman Of The American Legion Committee For The Memorial Day Ceremonies Opened The Program. Photographed By Marjory Collins In May 1942
Love this kinda stuff. I'm always curious how they detail the colours of details from black and white pictures?
Besides researching for references, I think there might be some ways to give away the color, or at least the tone by the shade of gray they have, at least an approximation. Besides with today's technology it must be easier to reverse engineer that with a computer, maybe some AI software.
Load More Replies...How does colourising balance and white photos change the way you perceive history? They're pretty, but what does it add to the original? And why are the colours all slightly muted? This was the age of the most brightly coloured early plastics and full-on chemical dyes for clothing.
Love this kinda stuff. I'm always curious how they detail the colours of details from black and white pictures?
Besides researching for references, I think there might be some ways to give away the color, or at least the tone by the shade of gray they have, at least an approximation. Besides with today's technology it must be easier to reverse engineer that with a computer, maybe some AI software.
Load More Replies...How does colourising balance and white photos change the way you perceive history? They're pretty, but what does it add to the original? And why are the colours all slightly muted? This was the age of the most brightly coloured early plastics and full-on chemical dyes for clothing.
