Swedish artist Sanna Dullaway digitally coloured several famous photographs that were shot in black and white to showcase her skills as a retoucher. This collection of images has now become an internet sensation. I think she did a fantastic job. I still prefer the original B&W but she did illustrate very well her talents as a retoucher. I would hire her! Have a look. [via ]
*click on images for a larger view*
VJ Day by EisenstaedtThich Quang Duc was born in 1897 and was a Vietnamese Buddhist monk. He burned himself to death on a busy street in Saigon on June 11, 1963 as a protest against South Vietnam’s persecution of Buddhists. ~ Photographed by Malcom Browne
[This iconic image was the first photograph Dullaway digitally coloured]
Taken by the late great Adams during the 1968 Tet offensive, it shows Nguyen Ngoc Loan, South Vietnam’s national police chief, shooting a prisoner who was said to be a Viet Cong captain. Adams, an Associated Press photographer, won a Pulitzer Prize for the photo.
Margaret Bourke-White World's Highest Standard of Living, 1937
Atomic Bomb
"Migrant Mother" by Dorothea Lange
Mark Twain
Churchill ~ by Karsh
Charlie Chaplin
Theodore Rooselvelt
Darwin
August Strinberg
Che
Hitchcock
Anne Frank
Eistein
Lincoln
Ted Turner (CNN creator) pissed off a lot of people by "colorizing" some classic Black & White films. Here is a short Doc on what happened.
Watch To Colorize or Not to Colorize on PBS. See more from Independent Lens.
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