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Posts Tagged ‘Visions’

Somewhere Outside of Time: 13 Classic Retro-Futuristic Architectural Visions

07 Sep

[ By SA Rogers in Architecture & Houses & Residential. ]

Retro-futuristic architecture seems to exist outside of time, perhaps in parallel universes where the versions of the future envisioned by their creators actually became reality. They combine design elements from the decades in which they were built with futuristic elements as the architects imagined them, recalling the science fiction of their respective eras, often seeming like remnants from movie sets. Many still stand in a rapidly changing world, feeling like portals to somewhere very far away.

Walden 7 by Ricardo Bofill

Built in 1975, this housing structure by Ricardo Bofill located outside Barcelona, Spain takes inspiration from the science fiction novel Walden Two by B.F. Skinner. It originally included 446 residences in 18 towers, resulting in a labyrinth organized around seven interconnecting interior courtyards. Bofill imagined that this structure would be a utopian urban residence addressing many of the problems of urban life, with space for gardens and social interaction as well as two swimming pools. The high rise still stands and functions as an apartment building, with some units combined to create larger spaces.

Palais Bulles by Antti Lovag

The strange and bulbous Palais Bulles, or Palace of Bubbles, was built in 1989 on a cliff overlooking the Mediterranean Sea. Though it’s often used as a setting for fashion shoots and film festival parties, architect Antti Lovag emphasizes that how the structure is inhabited is its most important aspect. “Whether for economic reasons or lack of technical solutions, human beings have confined themselves to cubes full of dead ends and angles that impede our movement and break our harmony.”

Monsanto House of the Future by Monsanto

Did you know that infamous agrochemical giant Monsanto (known for creating Agent Orange during the Vietnam War) built a ‘house of the future’ at Disneyland in 1957? Located at the entrance to Tomorrowland, the house was designed by Monsanto in collaboration with MIT and Disney Imagineers, showcasing their vision of what life would be like in 1987. Made of fiberglass, the house was elevated on a pedestal with the intention of allowing it to rotate. Everything was modular and made of synthetic materials. Monsanto’s House of the Future closed in 1967, and though it was scheduled to be demolished in one night, the wrecking ball bounced off its tough facade, and a 2-week demolition job was ultimately required to take it down.

Habitat 67 by Moshe Safdie

First built as a pavilion for the World’s Fair in 1967 after architect Moshe Safdie conceived it as his master’s thesis, Habitat 67 remains one of the most unusual buildings of its kind, featuring 146 residences and a network of interlocking forms and walkways. The architect wanted to maximize the amount of private space and natural environments within a small urban footprint, enhancing the quality of life with gardens, fresh air and views. It was intended to be the first phase of a much larger complex, but Safdie’s vision for futuristic affordable housing failed to proliferate due to the high per-unit cost of his design.

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Somewhere Outside Of Time 13 Classic Retro Futuristic Architectural Visions

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Future Cities: 13 Fresh New Visions for Residential Towers

13 Dec

[ By SA Rogers in Architecture & Houses & Residential. ]

spire-london-main

The future of urban living (at least for the wealthy) is looking pretty lush, with residential towers finding new and creative ways to incorporate greenery, maximize views and give residents the feel of a spacious suburban backyard hundreds of feet in the air. As unrealistic as some of the renderings have looked, these towers are becoming a reality, with many set to be completed in 2017.

Fake Hills by MAD Architects, Beihai, China

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One of those renderings that looked too fantastical to be real, ‘Fake Hills’ by MAD Architects is almost fully complete in the coastal Chinese city of Beihai. The development is part of a planned, built-from-scratch city featuring dense housing in architecturally innovative form along with a lush green landscape. The continuous roof platform running along the top will eventually be planted with gardens, too, and feature tennis courts and swimming pools.

Grove at Grand Bay by BIG, Miami

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BIG’s recently completed ‘Grove at Grand Bay’ in Miami is true to its renderings, down to the undulating planted areas at the base. The pair of twisting towers is actually a luxury ‘low density’ project featuring 98 units topped with dual level penthouses and containing seven swimming pools, a spa and fitness center, and an on-site art gallery in what could be perceived as stacked mansions for a dense urban setting.

Gridded Residential Tower by C.F. Møller and Brut, Antwerp

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This ‘vertical community’ by C.F. Møller is a residential and mixed-use tower that was “developed from the inside out,” placing an emphasis on social qualities, aiming for a suburban quality of life. The 24-story complex contains 116 homes, retail outlets, offices and communal areas, including enclosed winter gardens at each end of the tower and a shared 5th floor facility with a landscaped roof terrace. The envelope of the structure contains balconies enclosed within glass, spacious enough for kids to play.

Farmanieh Residential Tower by ZAAD Studio and Marz Design, Tehran

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The form of this residential tower by ZAAD is pretty unusual, featuring a series of modular units wedged between stacked circular platforms to create a patchwork of indoor and outdoor areas. Also set to the scale of a suburban home, the units offer a comfortable living environment and highly varied views of the city intermixed with spacious terraces.

Vertical Forest Tower by Stefano Boeri, Lausanne

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Critics have questioned whether this ‘vertical forest tower’ by Stefano Boeri is an ‘Alice in Renderland’ kind of concept, especially considering that the trees pictured along the peripheral areas of the structure would need a much deeper root system and lots more soil than the design allows. The vision of such large-scale greenery seems pretty unrealistic, especially given the high demand for water and the inevitable strain on the supporting structures. But we’ve been surprised before, and the tower is under construction with a completion date set for 2017, so we’ll soon find out.

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Future Cities 313 Fresh New Visions For Residential Towers

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Tunnel Visions: 15 All-Encompassing Explorable Art Installations

20 Jul

[ By SA Rogers in Art & Sculpture & Craft. ]

tunnels brooklyn 1

Few art experiences short of virtual reality are quite as immersive as entering a tunnel, literally surrounding yourself with an artist’s vision, blocking out nearly all sensory input not related to the installation. You’re temporarily transported to a dimension that’s not quite real, often unsure where the tunnel might take you. These 15 tunnel-based art installations offer explorable landscapes, inviting you to walk or even crawl through structures made of light, yarn, tape, salvaged wood and textiles.

LED Light Installation in Wellington by Angus Muir

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A permanent LED light installation inside a Wellington tram tunnel forms a shimmering, shifting series of arches that blink and change colors. The Wellington Car Cable Company commissioned artist Angus Muir to create the kaleidoscopic landscape of light,

The Pixels Crossing in Paris by Miguel Chevalier

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French artist Miguel Chevalier created a temporary tunnel connecting the Forum des Halles and the Place Carée in Paris, with shimmering, multicolored scenes moving in synch with a wave pattern of sound, giving commuters an otherworldly experience as they walked along the transit route.

‘Terminus’ Ribbon Tunnel in Georgia by Megan Mosholder

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Placed in the grass outside Atlanta’s Hambidge Center of Creative Arts and Sciences, ‘Terminus’ by Megan Mosholder offers a visual representation of the city’s potential if only they solved their transportation problems. The installation consists of ribbons strung along a frame, and light projected onto them to resemble a blurred train passing through a station at night.

‘Tunel’ by Rejane Cantoni & Leonardo Crescenti

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Any visitor stepping inside this interactive kinetic sculpture by Brazilian artistic duo Cantoni-Crescenti watched the architecture of the tunnel shift and transform in response to their own body weight and movement. 92 metal frames are individually controlled by a series of springs and cables, linked in a chain, so that your weight might cause the floor to incline or a section of the walls to rotate toward you.

Tube in Tirol by Numen/For Use

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Crawl around in a series of net tubes suspended high up off a gallery floor at this installation by Croatian-Austrian design collective Numen/For Use. ‘Tube’ is a maze of rope tunnels that mostly lead to dead ends, snaking up through an atrium and into the second level of Austria’s Architekturforum Tirol gallery.

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Tunnel Visions 15 All Encompassing Explorable Art Installations

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Driving on Auto-Pilot: 13 Future Visions of Cars & Commuting

12 Jan

[ By Steph in Technology & Vehicles & Mods. ]

future cars main
Within fifteen years we could be zooming around in flying passenger drones and self-driving luxury pods, and claiming packages from driverless delivery trucks that verify our identities by scanning our faces. At least, that’s what Mercedes-Benz, BMW and other automakers and designers seem to be hoping with these optimistically futuristic concept car designs – and while it might realistically take a lot longer than that to see real, functioning flying cars, some seemingly far-out ideas are already on their way.

Passenger Drone
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As if the idea of self-driving cars on the roads weren’t already nerve-wracking enough, soon passengers might be able to take to the skies without a pilot onboard. A Chinese startup called Ehang unveiled the world’s first passenger done, an Autonomous Aerial Vehicle that can carry one person and a single backpack for about twenty minutes from one location to another, with the destination set via tablet before takeoff. The 440-pound drone folds up its propellers to fit within a standard parking spot. What happens if something malfunctions? The company says the drone can still fly with a propeller out, and will land in the nearest possible area if anything goes wrong.

Self-Driving Chevrolet-FNR
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A world away from Google’s dorky self-driving bubble car, the Chevrolet-FNR by GM envisions the autonomous commuting future circa 2030. The front seats rotate to face the rear, and the interior is packed full of touch-screens, with iris-recognition entry, crystal laser lights and “magnetic hubbies wheel electric motors.” The “dragonfly dual-wing doors” are so sharp, they look dangerous.

Mercedes-Benz F 015

While the FNR isn’t exactly ready to actually hit the road, the similarly driverless Mercedes-Benz F 015 is already roaming San Francisco. This sleek and shiny luxury pod is part of Mercedes’ vision for a safer future in which all cars are unmanned, automatically stop to let pedestrians cross the road, and let all passengers read, text, surf the web or whatever it is humans will be doing on gadgets in 2030. The company still has a long way to go in ironing out the tech involved in this project, but the proof of concept is impressive.

Self-Driving IDEO
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The first of three self-driving vehicle concepts by global design company IDEO interacts with your email, calendar and text messages to set your route and senses when you’re 200 feet away, firing up and preparing for your ride. As you head down the freeway, your car will link up with other cars moving in the same direction, joining a ‘platoon’ of tailgating vehicles for speed and safety.

WorkOnWheels Commuting Workspace Pod
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IDEO’s second concept is WorkOnWheels, a transparent mobile office pod that zooms around the city, either acting as an automated place to complete tasks while you’re on your way to your workplace or zooming to the scenic setting of your choice. You can take your team on a brainstorming session by the sea, park in a bustling urban spot to observe city life or whatever else you can dream up. The pods are rentable by the hour and drive themselves back to their home base to recharge when you’re done.

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Driving On Auto Pilot 13 Future Visions Of Cars Commuting

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Sci-Fi Skyscrapers: 14 Futuristic Visions for Vertical Cities

10 Dec

[ By Steph in Architecture & Cities & Urbanism. ]

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As the global population grows and the world’s largest metropolises evolve into mega-cities, skyscrapers stretching higher than ever before could hold our transit hubs, parking garages, parks, museums and even food production systems. Some of these concept designs seem feasible for the near future while others could serve as the settings for science fiction.

Light Park Floating Skyscraper
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This concept for a floating skyscraper takes a similar tack, reacting to the infrastructure problems caused by rapid, unchecked urbanization by literally having no earthly footprint at all. The Light Park features a helium-filled cap and solar-powered propellers keeping it looming over Beijing like a ghost ship, and it contains parks, sports fields, green houses, restaurants and other public facilities.

Alternative Car Park Tower
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With all of its spiraling open levels, this parking garage tower envisioned for Hong Kong seems chaotic and unstructured, but it’s actually a well-thought-out automatic system that automatically sweeps cars from the ground floor to parking spots surrounding a central atrium.

Flex Towers for NYC
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An overflowing, overpopulated New York City could be in dire need of new technology to meet energy needs by the year 2040, as designer Paolo Venturella imagines with his ‘Flex Tower.’ This moving skyscraper tilts and rotates itself to follow the sun to perfectly position its envelope of solar panels at all times of the day.

The Tall Tower by Project Hieroglyph
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Sci-fi author Neal Stephenson, known for cyberpunk classics like ‘Snow Crash’ and ‘Quicksilver,’ has teamed up with the Center for Science and Imagination to design an incredible 12.4-mile-tall tower capable of launching rockets into space. 24 times the height of the Burj Khalifa, which is currently the world’s tallest building, Tall Tower would scrape the bottom of the stratosphere.

Twin Taiwan Towers
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Tangled with lush greenery, these tall, narrow twin towers stretch up to an observatory and sky park looking down over Taiwan. The base is inhabited by a set of museums focusing on the nation’s past, present and future, while the stems contain four different kinds of hanging gardens as well as high-end residences.

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Sci Fi Skyscrapers 15 Futuristic Visions For Vertical Cities

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Inner City Visions: 12 Eye-Opening Urban Eye Charts

15 Jun

[ By Steve in Architecture & Offices & Commercial. ]

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Have no illusions, these awesome urban optical eye charts test not only your vision but the varied ways in which we visualize the world around us.

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If you can’t read the characters on this downtown Toronto eye chart, what the heck are you doing behind the wheel?? Flickr users jbjelloid and John Tavares captured this clever use of an optician’s rear facade (the front is remarkably unremarkable) on January 27th of 2011 and December 4th, 2012 respectively.

What’s In Your Wallet?

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If you were an optometrist working at the now-abandoned Alameda Naval Air Station, then this handy-dandy portable eye chart would rest cheek-by-jowl with your cash and credit cards. How this particular  mini-chart ended up on the clinic floor is a mystery. Maybe the doctor was mugged… one might say he was robbed blind.

Optical Illumination

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Maybe we’re wrong but these curious eye chart wall sconce thingies (for want of a better term) would seem to be the optician’s equivalent of the iconic barber pole. This one isn’t lit – photographer Adam Slater captured several images shortly before the abandoned West Park Hospital/Asylum was demolished – and it’s a pity someone didn’t “liberate” it for creative re-use. Then again, maybe someone did: as far as we know it might be illuminating Slater’s living room right now.

Real And Spectacle-er

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Flickr user Bill Walker celebrated Self Portrait Thursday on June 23rd of 2011 with the above entry posted the previous day. Walker’s composition is all about texture, normally an attribute related to touch but in this case focused on vision.

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Inner City Visions 12 Eye Opening Urban Eye Charts

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Rural Retrofuturism: Dystopian Visions of Swedish Countrysides

23 May

[ By WebUrbanist in Art & Drawing & Digital. ]

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Set in an alternate-reality Sweden of the 1980s and 90s, these stunning paintings remix pastoral landscapes with futuristic robots, telling a story of a world that could have been. Robots roam alongside dinosaurs while people go about their everyday lives in surreal juxtapositions that seem all the more real for their everyday contents.

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Simon Stålenhag‘s artwork has spread like digital wildfire across the internet over the last few years, and the announcement of a pair of English-language books (Tales from the loop) of his images and stories has been met with overwhelming support – his crowdfunding campaign has already raised more than 25 times is modest original goal.

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The backstory could be the plot for an upcoming science fiction movie if fans have their way: “In the 1950s, the Swedish government orders the construction of a large particle accelerator. The state agency RIKSENERGI is tasked with developing this massive project. In 1969 the The Facility For Research In High Energy Physics is ready, located deep below the pastoral Mälaröarna-countryside. The local population soon calls it THE LOOP.”

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“The side effects of the project are dramatic. Strange sightings and bizarre rumours taints the scientific image of The Loop. In the shadow of the weird machines filling the countryside, life continues as normal. The kids of Mälaröarna grew up living above the technological marvel of The Loop, but for them it was just a part of their very ordinary lives. Until strange beasts from another time showed up, that is.”

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Fresh Images to Put Spring Visions in Your Head

07 Mar

When I think of spring some of these words come to mind:

  • Rebirth
  • Growth
  • Fresh
  • New

It’s my favorite time of year. I love how it smells after the rain comes. I love to see the grass turn green and flowers pop up. So here are some fresh images to get you thinking about spring.

Photograph Chlorophylle by Gaétan Zilli on 500px

Chlorophylle by Gaétan Zilli on 500px

Photograph Feel the Green! by Shaz Mazhare on 500px

Feel the Green! by Shaz Mazhare on 500px

Photograph Fern Rhapsody by Jensen  Chua on 500px

Fern Rhapsody by Jensen Chua on 500px

Photograph Abstract flowers card by Sergii Syzonenko on 500px

Abstract flowers card by Sergii Syzonenko on 500px

Photograph Vintage apricot flower by Roksana Bashyrova on 500px

Vintage apricot flower by Roksana Bashyrova on 500px

Photograph June green grass flowering by Elena Elisseeva on 500px

June green grass flowering by Elena Elisseeva on 500px

Photograph grass flower with water drops by meesri apichart on 500px

grass flower with water drops by meesri apichart on 500px

Photograph Closeup view of wet, pink coneflower by Frank Hoekzema on 500px

Closeup view of wet, pink coneflower by Frank Hoekzema on 500px

Photograph SKC 2899 Damsel of Nature by Sunil Kapadia on 500px

SKC 2899 Damsel of Nature by Sunil Kapadia on 500px

Photograph Fresh pink tulip flowers. by Iryna Soltyska on 500px

Fresh pink tulip flowers. by Iryna Soltyska on 500px

Photograph Tulips by Teerasak Tiamdao on 500px

Tulips by Teerasak Tiamdao on 500px

Photograph Violet by Thomas Zsebok on 500px

Violet by Thomas Zsebok on 500px

Photograph green by Margo B. on 500px

green by Margo B. on 500px

Photograph Foggy meadow at sunset by Roman Tsubin on 500px

Foggy meadow at sunset by Roman Tsubin on 500px

Photograph Young butterfly by YOline SAntosa on 500px

Young butterfly by YOline SAntosa on 500px

Photograph Birth of a Beauty by S. Tabrizi on 500px

Birth of a Beauty by S. Tabrizi on 500px

Photograph Poppy "cocoon" by Florin  Negruti on 500px

Poppy "cocoon" by Florin Negruti on 500px

Photograph Cocoon by Asma Adnan on 500px

Cocoon by Asma Adnan on 500px

Photograph Brotherly love by Daan de Vos on 500px

Brotherly love by Daan de Vos on 500px

Photograph Press the Copy Button - 5 times by Vincent Cheng on 500px

Press the Copy Button – 5 times by Vincent Cheng on 500px

Photograph Hello, Little One by Ben Robson on 500px

Hello, Little One by Ben Robson on 500px

Photograph Origin of life by Hugo Alberto on 500px

Origin of life by Hugo Alberto on 500px

Photograph PIU!!! cock by rui mendes on 500px

PIU!!! cock by rui mendes on 500px

Photograph Kitten by Artur Polachowski on 500px

Kitten by Artur Polachowski on 500px

Photograph ???????? by Nozomi Itabashi on 500px

???????? by Nozomi Itabashi on 500px

Photograph Violet by Magda  Bognar on 500px

Violet by Magda Bognar on 500px

Photograph Enjoy the Shower by Michael Kothes on 500px

Enjoy the Shower by Michael Kothes on 500px

Photograph Taste the rain by Steve Pomeroy on 500px

Taste the rain by Steve Pomeroy on 500px

Photograph drops by sydzey on 500px

drops by sydzey on 500px

Photograph Splish splash Im taking a bath by Leanne M Williams on 500px

Splish splash Im taking a bath by Leanne M Williams on 500px

Photograph Life Change by Shawn Malekifar on 500px

Life Change by Shawn Malekifar on 500px

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Rare Visions of the Past: 30 Old Color Photographs

03 Jul

[ By Steph in Art & Photography & Video. ]

Oldest Color Photos Main

The black-and-white shades of old photos can reduce the immediacy of the images, making them feel as if the people and events they captured existed so long ago as to be irrelevant to our current lives. But look at those same photographs in color, and you’ll marvel at how much is still the same. These 30 images were taken before color photography was widely available, powerfully preserving Nazi Germany, Depression-era America, early 20th century Paris and Russia during the Revolution.

Nazi Germany

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The vivid reds of the Nazi banners against a cheerful blue sky make these images of 1930s Berlin even more unsettling than they would be in black and white. Made available for the first time by the National Archives of Norway, the images ere taken by Thomas Neumann and kept hidden away for decades.

Other color photos from that era were taken by ardent Nazi Hugo Jaeger, who had access to Hitler himself and his upper echelon, capturing private moments of the Third Reich. Upon seeing his images, Hitler declared, “The future belongs to color photography.”

Early 1900s Paris

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Taken at the turn of the century, these photos reveal the Golden Age of Paris in all its charming beauty. Captured using Autochrome Lumiere technology, an early color photography process, the images give us a look at cityscapes, the Eiffel Tower, street scenes, museum displays and even an image of fireworks that looks like it could have been taken in the modern era.

America in the Depression Era

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Oldest Color Photos Depression 3

The Library of Congress has preserved thousands of color photos taken by photographers working for the U.S. Farm Security Administration, and later the Office of War Information, between 1939 and 1944. These photos are particularly intriguing because they capture scenes from that period of time that we don’t often see – migrant workers and poor laborers working on farms, as well as those most affected by the Depression, living in Dust Bowl states like Oklahoma.

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