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-   -   The Depression Years in Color: *PICS* (https://gfy.com/showthread.php?t=551769)

Harmon 12-13-2005 04:16 PM

The Depression Years in Color: *PICS*
 
I found this on CNN's website, and found it rather interesting. I know it's kind of a long read, but well worth it. Just thought I would share :thumbsup

In black and white. For decades that's how most people have recalled the Great Depression and World War II. In textbooks, on TV and in family scrapbooks -- photos from this important period in American history are almost always black and white.

That is what makes the Library of Congress' new exhibit so startling. History springs to life in brilliant color and detail -- small human details that black-and-white images cannot show -- like the color of a railroad worker's kerchief and her matching nail polish. Click through the gallery to see what little secrets these vibrant images will reveal about life in the 1930s and '40s.

http://www.cnn.com/interactive/us/05...olor/01.01.jpg

The New Deal photographers who captured these early color images are better known for their black-and-white work. But they also explored the potential of the new Kodachrome slide film as they created a visual record of America's farm life and, later, its home front.

This image, taken at a square dance in McIntosh County, Oklahoma, provides a glimpse into the social lives of young people in 1939.

http://www.cnn.com/interactive/us/05...olor/01.02.jpg

About a dozen photographers originally went to work for the Farm Security Administration, set up to help poor farmers buy equipment. Their portrait of poverty and dreariness, especially in the Appalachians, shocked many Americans.

In this 1940 image, a man sits in front of a store advertising "live fish for sale" in Natchitoches, Louisiana.

http://www.cnn.com/interactive/us/05...olor/01.03.jpg

Beverly Brannan, the library's curator of documentary photos, said a great deal of conservation and stabilization had to be done before the prints in the exhibit, "Bound for Glory: America in Color, 1939-1943," could be made and displayed.

In this image, a young boy stands on the streets of Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1942 or 1943.

http://www.cnn.com/interactive/us/05...olor/01.04.jpg

"When I look at the struggle coming up out of these pictures," writes Paul Hendrickson in the show's catalog, "I feel somehow as if I'm combing through my own and the country's ancestral attic with Woody Guthrie and John Steinbeck."

This photograph, snapped in St. Johns, Arizona, in 1940, shows people gathered to collect surplus supplies.

http://www.cnn.com/interactive/us/05...olor/01.05.jpg

Many of these powerful images capture ordinary moments in the lives of everyday Americans struggling through the economic hardships of the period.

This 1940 image captures the Caudill family sharing a meal in their dugout home in Pie Town, New Mexico, in 1940. Doris Caudill, in blue gingham and apron, reaches past a plate of biscuits, perched atop a red syrup can. Her husband, Faro, with tousled hair and a bandaged thumb delicately picks at his plate with the other hand.

http://www.cnn.com/interactive/us/05...olor/01.06.jpg

The collection also contains many images of Americans as they gear up for war. Here, Irma Lee McElory carefully paints an American insignia on the wing of a military plane in August 1942. McElroy worked at the naval air base in Corpus Christi, Texas, where her husband was a flight instructor.

http://www.cnn.com/interactive/us/05...olor/01.07.jpg

All of the color photos -- as well as more than 160,000 black-and-white images from the period -- can be viewed on the Library of Congress Web site.

At left, three dust-covered crewmen strike a jaunty pose in front of their M-4 tank at Fort Knox, Kentucky, in June 1942, just six months after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.

http://www.cnn.com/interactive/us/05...olor/01.08.jpg

The Library of Congress holds 1,600 color images covering both the Depression and World War II, and it is exhibiting 70 of them as digital prints at the Thomas Jefferson Building, across the street from the Capitol, through January 21, 2006.

In this 1942 image, a soot-covered worker at a carbon black plant in Sunray, Texas, smokes a cigarette after a long day on the job.

http://www.cnn.com/interactive/us/05...olor/01.09.jpg

Admission to the show in Washington is free. After closing, it is scheduled to go on display at the Amon Carter Museum in Fort Worth, Texas, from September 2 to November 12, and at the University of Kentucky Art Museum, Lexington, Kentucky, January 21 - April 8, 2007.

This image captures children at school in rural San Augustine County, Texas, in 1943.

http://www.cnn.com/interactive/us/05...olor/01.10.jpg

candyflip 12-13-2005 04:18 PM

I live a few miles from the George Eastman House and they've got the most amazing collection of photography.

Some of the early color stuff still looks great.

Loryn 12-13-2005 04:24 PM

Those are great! Thank you for sharing! :)

2HousePlague 12-13-2005 04:29 PM

Excellent share. Thank you!

Blogged -- ! -- :winkwink:


2hp

Tala 12-13-2005 04:33 PM

Fuckin awesome - love stuff like this. Thanks!

After Shock Media 12-13-2005 04:34 PM

BTW the woman painting the wing is hell of hot.

BigCashCrew 12-13-2005 04:35 PM

very good post! I enjoy stuff like this.

Cory W 12-13-2005 04:58 PM

Great Post!

je_rome 12-13-2005 05:06 PM

thanks for sharing those pics. the colors added more life to the pics.

reynold 12-13-2005 05:55 PM

Colors definitely paint enough words to those pics... :thumbsup

Bluewire Ross 12-13-2005 05:59 PM

interesting!

pornguy 12-13-2005 06:10 PM

Some of the colors are obvious when looking at a B and W photo. Some are not. What did they do, just guess?

Martin3 12-13-2005 06:43 PM

If you like things like that you should cheak out the World War I & II in color series.
You can get the video sets on amazon. Pretty interesting.

Kevsh 12-13-2005 07:23 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by After Shock Media
BTW the woman painting the wing is hell of hot.

Yes, I confess I was thinking the same thing. Part way through admiring those amazing photos and getting all nostalgic (even though I was not around in those days!), I completely resorted to the perverted webmaster mindset ...

aka "I'd hit it"

Seriously, thanks for sharing. Simply amazing stuff there and a taste of reality from a very scary era.

Jayvis 12-13-2005 07:24 PM

Hey nice post man.

wedouglas 12-13-2005 07:24 PM

also check out www.ww2incolor.com

Promo Chicks 12-13-2005 07:25 PM

Great photos

woj 12-13-2005 07:26 PM

good stuff :thumbsup

Kristian 12-13-2005 07:59 PM

Thanks for posting!

phonesex 12-13-2005 08:00 PM

thanks for the pictures

tony286 12-13-2005 08:08 PM

its funny so used to seeing them in black and white they dont look real.

psili 12-13-2005 08:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tony404
its funny so used to seeing them in black and white they dont look real.

Yea.

For some odd reason, they just don't have the same impact on me as they would in black and white. If I didn't see the two images depicting the old aircraft, I could have thought they were from today; and would have just threw up my shoulders as I do now and feel sorry for them. Feel bad that family / person was in such bad plight, wish it wasn't so, forget it until a synapse threw the image back into memory and just go on living as I do now.

Kind of sad when I think about that personal reaction.

So in the end, I guess the color does add a new perception to old pictures that I once didn't have, or could understand.

sickkittens 12-13-2005 08:55 PM

Nice pics. It's almost surreal loking at these pics and imagining what was.

Aneros Josh 12-13-2005 09:00 PM

very cool....

gornyhuy 12-13-2005 09:09 PM

Yeah to see these "historic" times in color really makes you be able to take it more personally and realistically.

Marshal 12-13-2005 09:27 PM

definitely the best pics i have ever seen on gfy! :thumbsup

OG LennyT 12-13-2005 09:36 PM

http://www.cnn.com/interactive/us/05...olor/01.09.jpg

Thats tough living.... thanks for posting these

sniperwolf 12-13-2005 09:39 PM

Nice find.. interesting article.. Thanks

sfera 12-13-2005 09:45 PM

nice photos dude, pretty cool how you can color them

Rob 12-13-2005 09:46 PM

Some of those would look great matted and framed! They would go nice with my WWII propaganda posters. :thumbsup

emthree 12-13-2005 10:04 PM

crazy shit

StickyGreen 12-13-2005 10:07 PM

tight shit... :thumbsup

Elli 12-13-2005 10:12 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by psili
Yea.

For some odd reason, they just don't have the same impact on me as they would in black and white. If I didn't see the two images depicting the old aircraft, I could have thought they were from today; and would have just threw up my shoulders as I do now and feel sorry for them. Feel bad that family / person was in such bad plight, wish it wasn't so, forget it until a synapse threw the image back into memory and just go on living as I do now.

Kind of sad when I think about that personal reaction.

So in the end, I guess the color does add a new perception to old pictures that I once didn't have, or could understand.

I had a very similar reaction, which makes the realization that these are so old and so well preserved that much more amazing.

Thomas1007 12-13-2005 11:26 PM

some very cool pics.
Puts me in awe of the hardship people endured in thier daily lives
during those times. The color adds alot to them, its a more humanized perspective IMHO. Awesome find. :2 cents: :thumbsup

Violetta 12-13-2005 11:29 PM

http://www.cnn.com/interactive/us/05...olor/01.07.jpg cute! :thumbsup

Drake 12-13-2005 11:45 PM

That's really cool

fetishblog 12-13-2005 11:48 PM

Interesting pix. Thanks for this..

PixeLs 12-14-2005 12:09 AM

Great stuff! I never thought that would be possible.. :thumbsup

Paraskass 12-14-2005 12:19 AM

wow... history just doesn't look the same in color.


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