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 ...
If you want to understand society, look at the way it talks about hue, suggests a new tome from art historian Alexandra Loske. In the shadow of World War II, modern capitalism was beginning to take ...
WHAT IT’S ABOUT “Colorizing” black-and-white movies remains controversial, some 30 years after initial attempts to make old films peacock-palatable in a color TV world. The original computer process ...
History looks boring in black and white until someone decides to give it life with color. Suddenly the past jumps off the page with people, streets, and moments that feel shockingly real. You see ...
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, ...
Composite Films conducted 5,800 hours of research and poured over 27 miles of film to create our series America in Color. Where did they even begin? Their art director fills us in on the maddeningly ...
We often think of history in black and white, quite literally. And that’s because most very old photographs are indeed monochrome, taken before a time when images could easily and affordably be ...
A familiar face from San Antonio TV screens just made a major career move, but it doesn't spell a return to the airwaves.
An exhibition at the Museum of Natural History is the sum of all lessons on hue. By Jason Farago The days have turned gray, the future feels black. We’re all seeing red, we’re all feeling blue.
During the Great Depression, lives were reshaped, fortunes were lost, and hope endured. This period is etched in the sepia-toned pages of history. But this time, we're bringing those memories to life ...
Redditors used PhotoShop to add color to black-and-white babes—and the colorized versions are awkwardly eye-catching. You know, for chicks who could be your grandma now. By Sam Prince, provided ...