See more of our coverage in your search results. Add The New York Post on Google Marina Amaral has been fascinated by history and photography for as long as she can remember. As a child she taught ...
Pictures are worth 1,000 words and all, but when they’re in black and white, it’s hard to imagine what certain moments in time were really like. The same goes for historical figures. Luckily, ...
Photos often shape the way we look at people we don't know. But if a person died a long time ago and the only remaining portraits of them are damaged black-and-whites, we might not get the full ...
Alfred T. Palmer, “Operating a hand drill at Vultee-Nashville, woman is working on a 'Vengeance' dive bomber, Tennessee” (1943) converted to grayscale by the author. For most of the history of ...
As illogical as it may sound (because it is), we sometimes forget that history happened in living color. That’s because we’re so used to seeing early still photography and early 20th century newsreels ...
Early photographic technology lacked a crucial ingredient — color. As early as the invention of the medium, skilled artisans applied color to photographs by hand, attempting to convey the vibrancy and ...
Black-and-white historical footage spanning the 1920s through 1960s will be brought to you in living color on Smithsonian Channel. The 50-person crew behind “America in Color,” a new five-part series ...
These colorized versions of black and white photographs allow you to look at a piece of history with a different eye. Before photos were collected on your phone they were taken on a camera, and before ...
There is something incredible that happens when we see a classic black-and-white photograph transformed into color. It makes the past seem more vivid, but also more surreal at the same time. Here are ...
A Brazilian artist has colorized dozens of black and white photos to bring history to life. She's taken black and white photos of some of the most important people and events from history and ...