A new artistic trend has broken out around the world which changes our perception of history dramatically. Colorizing historic photographs from the late 1800′s and early 1900′s changes their appearance from something historic and different, into a scene from today. The colorful image of Albert Einstein sitting beside the water gives us an entire new perspective on the genius. He goes from a brilliant historic relic, into a living brilliance of our era. The colorized photograph of Audrey Hepburn transforms our thoughts of beauty. Her photo goes from an intriguing historic photo to one of a sexy starlet of today. Historic events move forward decades, or even a full century, by the addition of color carefully planned and applied by artists like Jordan Lloyd, Dana Keller, and Sanna Dullaway.
London, 1945 (Photo credit: valdigtmycketfarg)
Hindenburg Disaster, 1937
Japanese Archers, circa 1860 (Colorized by Jordan J Lloyd)
View from the Capitol in Nashville, 1864 (Photo credit: Sanna Dullaway)
Albert Einstein in Long Island, 1939 (Photo credit: Paul Edwards)
Baltimore Slums, 1938 (Colorized by Jordan J Lloyd)
Unemployed Lumber Worker and His Wife, circa 1939
British Troops Board Their Train for the Front, 1939
Oscar II, King of Sweden and Norway, 1880 (Photo credit: Sanna Dullaway)
Old Gold Country store, 1939 (Colorized by Jordan J Lloyd)
Washington D. C., 1921 (Photo credit: Sanna Dullaway)
Charles Darwin, 1874 (Photo credit: Sanna Dullaway)
Abraham Lincoln, 1865 (Photo credit: Sanna Dullaway)
Theodore Roosevelt (Photo credit: Sanna Dullaway)
Louisville, Kentucky, 1937 (Photo credit: Sanna Dullaway)
Thich Quang Duc’s self-immolation, 1963 (Photo credit: Sanna Dullaway)
Anne Frank, 1942 (Photo credit: Sanna Dullaway)
Kissing the War Goodbye, 1945 (Photo credit: Sanna Dullaway)
Nicola Tesla
Big Jay McNeely, Olympic Auditorium, 1953
Elizabeth Taylor, 1956
Charlie Chaplin, 1916
Mark Twain, circa 1900
Walt Whitman, 1887
Nazi Minister of Propaganda Joseph Goebbels scowls at a Jewish photographer, 1933
Audrey Hepburn
Operation: Crossroads Atomic Detonation (Thank you Steven Vaught, Western Michigan University) (Photo credit: Sanna Dullaway)