Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Anybody can use Photoshop, but doing a good job remains a craft. Professional colorist from Brazil, Marina Amaral, doesn’t just click-and-drag. Driven by her burning obsession with history, Marina does extensive research to make her colorizations as realistic as possible, too.

Amaral has played with Photoshop since she was about ten. In 2015, she was scrolling a history forum on the internet and discovered colorized photos of World War I. Instantly inspired, Amaral started restoring and putting color into photos that were originally black and white. This allows people to experience the past through a whole new perspective. “Each photo is made to be realistic by recognizing the value behind each one of them, respecting and preserving their stories, paying attention to the finer details and maintaining their original essence.”

“Every completed work has gone through long and in depth research, and is supported by the opinions of experts in each particular area if necessary, to faithfully reproduce the original colors and atmosphere,” she adds. “My work ranges from simple portraits to complex and detailed images, taken from various historical periods covering a wide range of topics.” Continue scrolling to enjoy Marina’s wonderful work.

More info: marinamaral.com | Facebook | Twitter

#1 Ruby Bridges, Escorted By US Marshals To Attend An All-White School, 1960

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#2 Cree Man, Maple Creek, Saskatchewan, Canada, 1903

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#3 Monet

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#4 A Photographer Uses His Own Backdrop To Mask Poland’s World War II Ruins While Shooting A Portrait In Warsaw In November 1946

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#5 Lewis Powell. He Was A Conspirator With John Wilkes Booth, Who Assassinated President Abraham Lincoln

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#6 Marie Sklodowska Curie

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina amaral

#7 Four Female Pilots Leaving Their Ship, Pistol Packin’ Mama, At The Four Engine School At Lockbourne AAF, 1944

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#8 Queen Elizabeth II

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#9 Banana Docks, New York. CA 1890 – 1910

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#10 Finnish Sniper Simo Häyhä, White Death

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#11 Titanic Orphans, Brothers Michel And Edmond Navratil, 1912. They Were The Only Children To Be Rescued From The Titanic Without A Parent Or Guardian

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#12 Eunice Hancock, A 21-Year-Old Woman, Operates A Compressed-Air Grinder In A Midwest Aircraft Plant During World War II. August 1942

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#13 Roza Shanina, A 19-Year-Old Russian WWII Sniper With 59 Confirmed Kills

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#14 Young Kenyan Woman Holding A Dik-Dik, Mombasa, 1909

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#15 The Most Intelligent Picture Ever Taken: Participants Of The 5th Solvay Conference On Quantum Mechanics, 1927

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#16 Men Of 72 Highlanders Who Served In The Crimea: William Noble, Alexander Davison And John Harper, 1853 – 1856

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#17 Coronation Of Queen Elizabeth II. 2 June, 1953

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#18 Senator John F. Kennedy And Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy On Their Wedding Day. September 12, 1953

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#19 Grigori Rasputin. Lover Of The Russian Empress

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#20 Private Paul Oglesby, 30th Infantry, Standing Inprivate Paul Oglesby, 30th Infantry, Standing In Reverence Before An Altar In A Damaged Catholic Church (Santa Maria Degli Angeli). Acerno, Italy, September 1943

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#21 Hermann Göring Sits In The Dock At The Nuremberg Trial, 1946

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#22 Einstein And Chaplin

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#23 Italian Immigrants Arrive At Ellis Island, 1905

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#24 Migrant Mother, Nipomo, California, 1936

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#25 Albert Einstein, 1 March 1921

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#26 Winston Churchill As A Cornet In The 4th Queen’s Hussar’s Cavalry, 1895

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#27 Queen Victoria And Her Family, Including King Edward VII, Tsar Nicholas II, Tsarina Alexandra, Kaiser Wilhelm II And Empress Frederick At A Wedding In Coburg, Germany, 1894

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#28 Lincoln, 1860

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#29 Faces Of Auschwitz: Janina Nowak

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#30 The Liberation Of Bergen-Belsen, April 1945

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#31 A Group Of Bootblacks Gather Around An Old Civil War Veteran In Pennsylvania, 1935

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#32 Sami Girl, 1938, Suenjel, Petsamo

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#33 American Infantrymen Of The U.S. Army’s 92nd Infantry Division (“Buffalo Soldiers Division”) Are Photographed At Rest In Italy. April 1945

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#34 Before And After The Facial Reconstruction Of A Wounded Soldier During World War I

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#35 Jack Kerouac

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#36 Hiroshima After Bombing

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#37 Queen Elizabeth Great Grandmother

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#38 Civil Rights March On Washington, D. C. With Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. And Mathew Ahmann In A Crowd

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#39 Filthy Thirteen Member Clarence Ware Applies War Paint To Charles Plaudo. England, 31 December 1943

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#40 School At Anthoston, Kentucky, 1916

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#41 Otto Frank Anexo

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#42 Bull Chief, An Indian Warrior, Apsaroke Tribe. The Photo Was Taken In 1908 By Edward S. Curtis. He Is Wearing A Buffalo Headdress With Horns

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#43 Bodybuilder Gene Jantzen With Wife Pat, And Eleven-Month-Old Son Kent, 1947

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#44 Unemployed Lumber Worker (Thomas Cave) Goes With His Wife (Vivian) To The Bean Harvest, Oregon, August 1939

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#45 Booker T. Washington

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#46 Soccer Team Of British WWI Soldiers Wearing Gas Masks, France, 1916

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#47 Brazilian Army Pvt. Francisco De Paula Of The Brazilian Expeditionary Force During The Italian Campaign, WWII

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#48 Photograph From The Main Eastern Theater Of The War, Battle Of Antietam, Md. Allan Pinkerton, President Lincoln, And Maj. Gen. John A. Mcclernand, 1862

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#49 Gustave Eiffel

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#50 Archduke Franz Ferdinand Of Austria

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#51 James Dean

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#52 RMS Mauretania, 1909

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#53 Dick Winters And His Easy Company (Hbo’s Band Of Brothers) Lounging At Eagle’s Nest, Hitler’s Former Residence In The Bavarian Alps, 1945

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#54 Dumpu, New Guinea, 7 October 1943. Members Of The 2/2nd Australian Independent Company

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#55 A Slovak Woman With Her Child – Ellis Island Immigrants, 1900s

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#56 Ice-Skaters On Ice In Tuxedo Park, New York, Circa 1904

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#57 Angoni Warriors At King George V’s Coronation Celebrations, Zomba, 1911

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#58 Yuri Gagarin

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#59 Malmö, Skåne, Sweden, 1910

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#60 Nurse Aiko Hamaguchi

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#61 French Soldier Falls After Being Shot In No-Man’s-Land At Verdun

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#62 Old Peasant With Dagger And Long Smoking Pipe, Mestia, Svanetia, Georgia

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#63 Sami People And A Traditional Peat Hut, CA. 1850

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#64 Mark Twain 1900s

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#65 Covent Garden Laborers, 1877, London

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#66 Dominikus Müller

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#67 A German Soldier With A Saw Tooth Bayonet Stands In A Dugout Wearing His Brow Plate Slid Down To His Neck, World War One

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#68 Canadian Soldiers Celebrating After Fighting On Vimy Ridge, April 1917

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#69 Greta Garbo, 1939

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#70 Titanic Prepares To Leave Port, 1912

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#71 Big Ben 1920

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#72 Santa Claus With Christmas Toys On A Sled Drawn By White Turkeys, 1909

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#73 Jackie Robinson Of The Brooklyn Dodgers, Posed And Ready To Swing – 1 January 1954

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#74 Martin Luther King

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#75 A German Soldier Being Captured During The Battle Of Moscow, 1 Dec 1941

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#76 August Kowalczyk

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#77 A US Soldier Stands Amid Crates And Stacks Of Loot Stored By Nazi Germany In Schlosskirche (Castle Church), Bavaria, 1945

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#78 A U.S. Navy Hospital Corpsman Takes Down The Information Of A U.S. Marine Of The 1st Marine Division Who Was Killed On The Beach Of Peleliu During The American Landings Of The Battle Of Peleliu (Operation Stalemate II)

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#79 US Marine Corps Private First Class Faris M. Tuohy Drinking A Cup Of Coffee Aboard A Ship Off Eniwetok After Two Days Of Fighting, Marshall Islands, Feb 1944

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#80 President John F. Kennedy With His Son, John F. Kennedy, Jr., In The Oval Office, White House, Washington, DC – 25 May 1962

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#81 Working On Lincoln, Mt. Rushmore 1937

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#82 Mikhail Kalashnikov

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#83 Colonel Thomas Edward Lawrence, Also Known As Lawrence Of Arabia

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#84 President Theodore Roosevelt In His Rough Riders Uniform With His Signature Blue Polka-Dotted Scarf, 26 October 1898

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#85 Grand Duchesses Tatiana And Olga Romanov

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#86 Donald W. Stulp, A Baker For The Omar Bakery In Omaha

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#87 September 1942. New York. Drinking Fountain In Central Park On Sunday

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#88 Al Capone

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#89 Paris Street In The June Days Uprising, 1848

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#90 General Douglas Macarthur, 1930

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#91 Thomas Edison Relaxing On A “Vagabonds” Camping Trip, 1921

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#92 Photograph Of The Nimrod Expedition (1907-09) To The Antarctic, Led By Ernest Shackleton

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#93 Royal Marine Commandos D Day

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#94 The Jersey Shore Circa 1905

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#95 Edgar Allan Poe

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#96 Fridtjof Nansen

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#97 Newsies At Skeeter’s Branch. St. Louis, Missouri – May 9, 1910 (Lewis Hine)

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#98 A Bedouin In His Happy Mood

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#99 A 1st Royal Ulster Rifles, 6th Airborne Division (UK) Sniper, On Patrol In The Ardennes, Wearing A Snow Camouflage Suit. 14 January 1945

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#100 Empress Alexandra And Tsar Nicholas II

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#101 A National Socialist Helps An Elderly Woman From A Polling Station During The German Federal Election, Berlin, November 1932

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#102 Daredevil John “Jammie” Reynolds Performing Acrobatic And Balancing Acts On High Cornice Above 9th Street, N.W. – 1917

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#103 Leon Trotsky

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#104 Elizabeth Garrett Anderson, 1889

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#105 Emmeline Pankhurst, C.1910

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#106 Sir Winston Churchill In His Knight Of The Garter Robes, His Son Randolph, And Grandson, Winston. Queen Elizabeth II’s Coronation Day, 1953

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#107 Tsar Nicholas II, Last Russian Emperor

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#108 US Marines In An LCVP Approaching Iwo Jima, Japan, 19 Feb 1945

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#109 Franz Liszt

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#110 American Troops Prepare Nazi Major General Anton Dostler For Execution For Killing 15 OSS Men, Italy, 1945

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#111 Leo Tolstoy

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#112 Massaponax Church, VA. Council Of War, 1864

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#113 A Prisoner Of War (Pow) Is A Person, Whether Combatant Or Non-Combatant, Who Is Held In Custody By A Belligerent Power During Or Immediately After An Armed Conflict. The Earliest Recorded Usage Of The Phrase “Prisoner Of War” Dates To 1660

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#114 A Sniper From “C” Company, 5th Battalion, The Black Watch In Position In A Ruined Building In Gennep, Holland, 14 February 1945

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#115 Archduke Franz Ferdinand And His Wife, Sophie, Leave Sarajevo City Hall On June 28, 1914, Shortly Before They Were Killed. Within 30 Days, Wwi Would Begin

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#116 Peasants Of Upper Egypt, CA. 1900

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#117 Ted Williams

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#118 Marine Identified As Sgt Angelo Klonis Smoking A Cigarette During The Final Days Of Fighting To Gain Control Of The Island Of Saipan From Occupying Japanese Forces During WWII, 1944

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#119 Two German Soldiers Read A Newspaper Before Using It For Another Purpose

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#120 Arthur Schopenhauer By J Schäfer, 1859

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#121 American Soldiers, Paris

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#122 Hitler With Some Of His SS-Begleitkommando Guards At The Wolf’s Lair In East Prussia

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#123 Dom Pedro II, Last Emperor Of Brazil

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#124 Jackie Kennedy

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#125 Recruiting Sergeants At Westminster, Mitre And Dove Pub, 1877

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#126 Jacquelyn Kennedy

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#127 Elvis Presley’s Second Appearance In The Ed Sullivan Show

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#128 Margaret Thatcher

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#129 Max Planck

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#130 Tsar Nicholas II

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#131 General George S. Patton Acknowledging The Cheers Of The Welcoming Crowds In Los Angeles, Ca, During His Visit On June 9, 1945

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#132 Robert Falcon Scott

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#133 Richard M. Nixon And Elvis Presley At The White House, 12/21/1970

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#134 Armia Krajowa

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#135 Brewster B-239 Buffalo With 33 12 Victories And The Pilot Lt. Hans Wind, Finland 1943

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#136 Napoleon’s Grande Armée Veterans. Burg – Fourrier Of The Grenadiers Of The Imperial Guard. Delignon – Marechal De Logis Guard Jager 1809 – 1815 (Actually Marechal Des Logis Chef – Sergeant Major Chasseurs ‘A’ Cheval De La Garde Imperiale.

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#137 Liberator Crew Of No 311 (Czech) Squadron And Dog Sat On The Wing Of A Liberator Mk IIA, Possibly Serial Number LV343 At RAF Beaulieu, 21 July 1943.

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#138 Soviet Army Soldiers Manning A Maxim Machine Gun (Lower Right) And Two Others, One In A Doorway And One In A Second-Floor Window, Take Aim At German Positions During The Battle Of Berlin. May 1945

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#139 Hesse And By Rhine Family In 1876

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#140 Jim Clark At 1965 Dutch Grand Prix

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#141 Maj. Greg Pappy Boyington

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#142 Bringing Canadian Wounded To The Field Dressing Station At Vimy Ridge In April 1917

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#143 Charles De Gaulle

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#144 Ulysses S. Grant, Ca. 1873

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#145 Exercise Horse Artillery Corps, Arnhem (Netherlands), Ca. 1900, Exercise At A Training Ground

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#146 King George V, 1914

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#147 Edward VII At His Coronation, 1902

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#148 American Civil War: Fort Pulaski, Ga. Interior View Of The Breach, April 1862

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#149 German Stormtrooper Photographed On A French Training Ground Exercise For The March 1918 Kaiserschlacht Offensive

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#150 Band Of Brothers – Eagles Nest

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#151 Ty Cobb – Detroit Tigers V New York Yankees, 1909

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#152 King Oscar II Of Sweden And Norway

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#153 Prince Edward, Later King Edward VIII, Dressed In An Ermine Gown, 1911

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#154 Friedrich Ebert

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#155 John Surratt

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#156 Stalin In March 1935

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#157 Ayrton Senna At The 1991 US Grand Prix

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral

#158 Adolf Hitler

Artist Colorizes Old Black & White Photos, And It Makes A Huge Difference In How We See Past Events

Image source: Marina Amaral