Check these out. Simply amazing!
http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/2010/08/russia_in_color_a_century_ago.html?p1=Well_MostPop_Emailed5
Awesome...
I wondered if they used a recombining effect with some of the splits in the colour images (three pics with coloured filters) which apparently was the basis for the images - truly historical documents...
YEAH~ Amazing!!! :o
Awesome stuff - thanks for posting!
I really like Russia, but have never been there. Definitely on my to-do-list.
The color in those photos is vivid - probably a result of high chroma levels in the RGB - but whatever, they are fascinating!!
Quote from: uwe on August 25, 2010, 04:37:43 AM
Awesome stuff - thanks for posting!
I really like Russia, but have never been there. Definitely on my to-do-list.
My wife & son went on a 12 day mission trip there. They went to Moscow ST. Petersburg & Arkhangelsk. She said in St Petersburg the city although looking old was actually rebuilt after WWII. They had to have clearance and be accompanied by a Russian tour guide? the whole trip. more to get by the Mafia than the government (like to steal your passport). The hotels were horrible, but all of the ones they went to had strip clubs & bars. The took a train from Moscow to St Petersburg and the bathroom was a hole in the floor of a train car. The people were very nice to them.
I've been to Russia five times. :) I love the place and the people. First time was in late 89 when it was still Soviet. Its been amazing to return each time and see the changes. My favourite places there are St Petersburg and Mineralyne Vody down in the South. The Caucuses are very beautiful. Kind of like an un-manicured Alps.
I'd LOVE to go to Russia but would make sure not to get surrounded in the winter. ;D
But is it worth the risk of going on the "list of dubious persons" at Homeland Security...? :o
Quote from: Kenny's 51st State on August 26, 2010, 10:59:15 AM
But is it worth the risk of going on the "list of dubious persons" at Homeland Security...? :o
They already put law-abiding citizens on the list, even if accidentally, so a visit to Russia would be worth the risk, I bet.
Amazing photos. Not only from a technical standpoint, but also because I'm probably related somehow to the skiff captain in frame #14.
Quote from: Kenny's 51st State on August 26, 2010, 10:59:15 AM
But is it worth the risk of going on the "list of dubious persons" at Homeland Security...? :o
Our VP at the university once went to a war protest rally in the 60's - admitted with a grin this week that the FBI has a file on him!
Of course, back then Hoover was building files on people who spat on the sidewalk.
i might have a file somewhere as well for 'sixties political stuff'. how would i go about finding out for sure. freedom of information act?
the guys at homeboy security probably got this email the second i posted it. paranoia....
Quote from: Kenny's 51st State on August 25, 2010, 03:48:18 PM
Invasion...?
Sigh, it's not like I haven't provoked comments like these. :mrgreen: :mrgreen: :mrgreen:
Historically, a case can be made though that whenever Russia and Germany were at war it cost both dearly. And when we got along, we both benefitted.
Is that not true in any relationship?
WOW!!!!
"Homeboy Security".....I like it! New department name to make the unit more "publicly accessible"....
Quote from: nofi on August 27, 2010, 10:14:25 AM
i might have a file somewhere as well for 'sixties political stuff'. how would i go about finding out for sure. freedom of information act?
the guys at homeboy security probably got this email the second i posted it. paranoia....
Since FBI files on civilians were illegal then, they don't technically "exist," so you can't use FOI to get at one. Homeland files, OTOH, are 'legal' but probably off-limits for "security reasons."
Quote from: the mojo hobo on August 28, 2010, 03:01:44 AM
Is that not true in any relationship?
Wisely spoken and true. But the relationship between Russia and Germany was insofar tragic as Russia from czarist days and even in communism always saw Germany as a role model country, perhaps because Germany is the most eastern country of Western Europe and has always had this middleman role. Likewise, Russian culture and especially literature was always held in high esteem in Germany. There was a perceived kinship which only the Nazis attempted to destroy.