Paper time machine: a project that enlivened history in unique photographs
The Paper Time Machine project is the result of an incredible collaboration between Wolfgang Wilde and Jordan Lloyd. The book brings together more than a hundred photographs, carefully examined and restored in such a way that the story comes to life on the pages of the publication.
Color makes each image closer and more understandable to us, our time, linking the history and problems that modern people face.
Florence Thompson with one of his children. Watsonville, California, 1936.
Mechanic working on a steam pump, 1920.
Wilbur Wright piloting a full-size glider, Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, October 10, 1902.
Ice grotto in Antarctica, 1911.
Douglas SBD "Fearless" bomber balances on the bow after an emergency landing on board the flight deck in the Pacific Ocean, 1943.
Climbing the Great Pyramid of Giza, between 1868 and 1899.
Golden Gate Bridge under construction in 1934.
San Francisco 6 weeks after the earthquake and fire of 1906.
Tower Bridge in London during construction in 1889.
The Empire State Express passenger train passes through Washington Street in New York, 1905.
Beach and Cliff House in San Francisco, 1902.
Sumi and Sada Tamura, the daughter of Mr. Teijiro Tamur, the former Third Secretary of the Japanese Embassy in the United States, in Washington, 1925.
People arrived at the Chicago Theater, 1949. Photo taken by 21-year-old Stanley Kubrick.
Inventor John Archibald Pervez tests his Dinasphere in Weston-super-Mare, 1932.
Watch the video: Viktor Schauberger - Comprehend and Copy Nature Documentary of 2008 (May 2024).
Why do giraffes have such a diverse pattern on the skin, what role do spots of different sizes and colors play, is this specific pattern inherited? These and many other questions concern biologists involved in the study of giraffes. Not so long ago, Australian scientists proposed their own solution to these issues and hypothesized that spots determine the status of a giraffe in a population, at least in male giraffes. ...