You can now buy us a Coffee to support our work! 💛☕ buymeacoffee.com/vintagetreasures
@deanwright91674 ай бұрын
@@VintageTreasuresVideos don't use click bait thumbnails in your videos and you might get a coffee
@MrTremewan8 ай бұрын
What stands out most to me is how just about everyone looks relaxed and at ease. Photos of people nowadays usually show people looking worried or depressed.
@ianhawdon36804 ай бұрын
You know why
@MrGovtCheese2 ай бұрын
@@ianhawdon3680 I wish people could be teleported back to that time to see for themselves if they believe life was so much better and easier. Ironically, it's the same people who say that folks today have it too easy and are soft. Many people back then would exchange places with you in a heartbeat. This was right before the Great Depression.
@mistyamarch2 ай бұрын
that is some really selective inpression you have there. a lot of these photos had people looking neutral, and a huge majority of pictures nowadays also have people smiling and looking relaxed, its no different. People are still people. if you get the impression genuinely that times were more relaxed them or people were ohhh boy, you have some history to catch up on. this is like people thinking influencers on instagram all have perfect lives 🙈
@TsubomisLLCАй бұрын
Wait till 1929 comes around!
@Midg-td3ty10 ай бұрын
Travelling back in time would be my dream. Every decade of the 20th century and stay 1 year per decade. The experience would be unbeatable.
@Cynthia.Cinderella10 ай бұрын
Exactly thank you my friend I didn’t know anybody else could think that way!!!!!as do I
@SuperLittleTyke9 ай бұрын
Until one becomes sick. In 2013 I had triple bypass surgery. Not possible back then. No modern drugs. No antibiotics.
@MarkCarlson-u9l8 ай бұрын
It still would be worth it. Today they are trying to kill use.
@Pulsonar7 ай бұрын
@@MarkCarlson-u9lyep, the governments worldwide are thinking up ways to cull their national populations. Too many people, and so little pension money, we are in trouble. Wars will soon become People vs State 😂
@hulkhatepunybanner7 ай бұрын
*Make sure you don't catch Spanish Influenza, tuberculosis, or small pox.* No penicillin until 1929.
@patrickwalker2357 Жыл бұрын
What so amazing is that the ladies and the men had style and it was personal they all Were capable of being themselves and so so smart.
@histubeness10 ай бұрын
Some of them may have had style, but no way to verify if they were smart.
@noellesherman48248 ай бұрын
By "smart," he meant smartly dressed, not brain smart.
@hulkhatepunybanner7 ай бұрын
*If they had money, they had style.* Same as it's always been.
@discojelly7 ай бұрын
It was considered Blasphemy back then.
@Youngguns423036 ай бұрын
And if you could have seen these same people a few years later when everything was at their finger tips... most of that plumpness was loss and so was the glow when they were struggling to feed themselves and families.
@WarriorAnuhazi6 ай бұрын
Class, manners, fitness, culture and fashion. Sounds exact to opossite on US this days. Respect.
@SatansSimgmaАй бұрын
By time you were 8 you had 2 brothers die of polio and your an orphan. These are photos of the rich people. You wouldn't be in these pictures.
@WarriorAnuhaziАй бұрын
@@SatansSimgma Agree, my grandfather use to fight on front line for those MF. hahahaa
@conscience5806 ай бұрын
What strikes me is that people seemed so ... happy. Excitement and hope in the air.
@ankhpom92966 ай бұрын
2024 you have social decay and a rise in idiocy. Look at the MAGA political cult.
@kakiam62 ай бұрын
Not for long, though. Then, sadly, came the Great Depression.
@VintageLullaby-hu3pd10 ай бұрын
This is beautiful. The 1920s, 30s and 40s were the most amazing times. I love everything vintage, especially the music ️🎶❤️
@mham13308 ай бұрын
Bigotry still abounded. The pictures do not depict Negros and Whites together. Some towns had curfew laws in placed and inforced directed towards the Negros (Colored People) of the city; town.😣
@hulkhatepunybanner7 ай бұрын
*Two world wars and depressions in between.* Amazingly amazing.
@WatchmyPlaylist.2 ай бұрын
things have been bad since the 1910s bud. evil took over the world.
@samuelharang57422 ай бұрын
@@WatchmyPlaylist.Things have been bad since ever bud. Evil has been a thing since man first roamed.
@TsubomisLLCАй бұрын
Oh yeah. Great Depression, WW2. Great times!
@Dadsezso11 ай бұрын
This is the decade that my father was born. My grandparents, born in the late 1800's were young adults like many in these pics in the 20's. I always love to see pics like these. Thanks for taking time to create this.
@marilyn655611 ай бұрын
My parents were born in the 20’s, so I love to see pictures from that time. I don’t think my grandmother was a flapper, though. They lived on a farm so fashion wasn’t a big deal. But, my mother dressed beautifully and fashionably when she was young, and before the war broke out. Things were rationed then, even fabric.
@AdamsOlympia10 ай бұрын
My grandparents were all born in the 1910s, but my childhood neighbors were born in the late 1800s, died in the 1990s. One of my favorite things in the world was sitting with them for hours and listening to all their vivid stories of life in a completely different world than we know today. Back when horse and buggies weren’t just for the Amish .. ;) He had a gnarly scar on his leg from getting his foot caught in the wagon spokes as a kid; walked with a limp for the rest of his life. I truly miss hanging out with this generation. They’re a different breed of people, even compared to those born in the 30s who’re still living. I’d give anything if I could have had more time with them.
@shadykatie100 Жыл бұрын
I really love the clothes from the 20s.
@GTRPGeisterfahrer9 ай бұрын
We now are in the 20s.
@shadykatie1009 ай бұрын
@@GTRPGeisterfahrer The 1920s. You knew what I meant.
@Heather-nq4rv9 ай бұрын
They were so much more classy and modest back then. ❤
@stevedickson58538 ай бұрын
Come the 30s millions were walking in rags
@ankhpom92966 ай бұрын
Those were the days.
@alphadog3384 Жыл бұрын
You did an excellent job colorizing the film. That was my grandparents time of being young. Really can see the sign of the times what was important to society in the 1920s.
@pravdanet10 ай бұрын
Not film. Just foto slides. And there's many places, where was a wrong colour. Too much times
@kSparrow988910 ай бұрын
They all have natural beauty at that time.
@JK-yf2vl5 ай бұрын
Called good health. No processed foods.
@apocalypsemeow652010 ай бұрын
Classy, elegant, no tattoos or torn clothes, people enjoyed life to the fullest, minds open and eyes not yet locked behind cell phone screens. Sigh
@damasovelez17158 ай бұрын
All those folks are in spirit world ..wish them all good luck. 😮
@peppercat8718 Жыл бұрын
People were so well dressed back then and not a lot of over weight people either. Great colorization 👍
@baylorsailor Жыл бұрын
The luxury of being overweight for the majority wasn't there yet. If you look at statistics, obesity rises with the popularity of fast food and later with Welfare, as many states give quite a bit of money to those on the system for food and there are no restrictions on what they can buy with their EBT card (so long as it's "food"). They can literally spend all their food money on donuts and soda. Keep in mind that in New York the food allowance for a family of three under the poverty line is about $500 a month. During covid, NY was giving out double that amount to those on welfare for the whole of the last three years. Doctors in the 1920s also were not afraid to tell their patients to lose weight for their health if they were getting pudgy.
@vanillaexplosion99 Жыл бұрын
@@baylorsailor People walked more back then and were outdoors more as well(no TV), no air conditioning, so the body works to stay cool in summer. And lets not forget strong fat shaming existed 30 plus years ago.
@kirkdarling4120 Жыл бұрын
If you study enough Google images, you see that obesity did _not_ grow with an expanding economy. The US economy exploded immediately after WWII, but the fat explosion occurs in the 1980s. There were three major areas that the US changed _suddenly_ within the decade of the 70s, making the 80s substantially different from the 60s. 1. Eating habits changed dramatically. Prior to the 70s, nearly everyone ate only three times a day with almost nothing but water between meals. There were no vending machines in schools and workplaces. There were no break rooms with microwaves and refrigerators. Schoolchildren and office workers did not eat at their desks, nobody brought in donuts. People got water, maybe coffee with sugar, during a single break in the morning and another in the afternoon. Kids came home from school and had to wait until dinner. There was virtually no snacking. I distinctly recall in the later 60s when the food industry _invented_ the "after school snack" and started pushing mothers to have snack food on hand. After the 70s, people had snack food constantly available and many people began consuming calories nearly every waking hour of the day. 2. Ultra-processing of fast and junk foods was spun up during the 70s. The mantra at the time was "better living through chemistry," and food became highly chemicalized. Yes, there was "fast food" prior to the 70s, but "fast food" in the 60s was just whole food cooked in casual restaurants. "TV Dinners" were regular food that was cooked and simply frozen. Wheat in the 60s was still pretty much the same wheat of fifty years earlier. The creation of ultra-processed foods was from the 70s.
@o00scorpion00o Жыл бұрын
@@baylorsailor Obesity isn't a problem of the poor, it's an issue with modern western civilisation, you can eat fast food and still be slim if you burn those calories off. The real issue, especially in western society is lack of movement, too fond of cars and binging on Netflix and social media. How many kids today do we see playing on the streets or in local neighbourhoods ? they're all on screens. Obesity isn't a welfare issue it's a society issue.
@o00scorpion00o Жыл бұрын
@@vanillaexplosion99 lol fat shaming is probably hate speech today.
@dennisneo160811 ай бұрын
Everyone knew what they were then. Great times of my great grandparents generation.
@bartwfielder10 ай бұрын
it seems 1880 to like 1950 was the golden generation. The best decade (and the most destructive) was 1890's. Lots of stuff happened in Nevada and California
@gorgthesalty8 ай бұрын
Not great if you were black, native, Jewish, gay, wanted a beer, worried about lead poisoning, asbestos in houses, wanted a 40 hour work week, did not want child labour, or were a woman (they just barely got the right to vote, but were still expected to be at home and sexism was rampant). Those rose colored glasses, some keep them quite snuggly on their face.
@togowack7 ай бұрын
@@bartwfielder the golden generation aka reset generation where people weren't allowed to talk about family origins (mass genetic engineering and incubators).
@alannalab1790 Жыл бұрын
Beautiful photographs and great music to go with them. Love it!
@Teeb202310 ай бұрын
The music in this one really is great.
@sonnycorleone8352 Жыл бұрын
Vintage treasures, Very good job here. I am into history and love the 1920's-1940's scenes! I love how well-the people dressed back in these eras and the cars as well! Thanks for the upload.
@darakbangenglish5 ай бұрын
Looking at the old days makes me want to jump into that time right now.
@valentinius624 ай бұрын
We could bring it back, but it would take a collective will.
@4LuvOfGAIA3 ай бұрын
Just in time for the great depression and then a world War.
@ReaderOfThreads2 ай бұрын
Ah, the good old days. No EHS/HSE, life expectancy in the 50’s, no safety regulations at work, smog that would turn white clothing black, and of course tobacco companies telling the public that cigarettes were good for you. As you say, the good old days 🤦🏼♂️
@valentinius622 ай бұрын
@@ReaderOfThreads Yes. I remember smoking in malls and airports back in the '80s. I'm smoking now as I write this 40 years later.
@Dobrinya_Nikitych Жыл бұрын
Большое спасибо! Привет из России! С Новым Годом!👍🎄
@Whoremembersusa2 ай бұрын
My parents were born during that time. When they were alive, they often shared beautiful memories and the challenges they faced. It’s a joy to see these images again today
@alecfromminnenowhere2089 Жыл бұрын
Outstanding. Colorizing brings the past into a closer retrospect to the present. I always wondered what it was like when my Grandmother was growing up.
@jimydoolittle31296 ай бұрын
Great work putting together this collection 🤗❤ What a beautiful time our parents lived in, natural people, pretty, educated, polite , elegant, thin, without tattoos, very elegant, I think we have a lot to learn from our past,
@serenadevon6 ай бұрын
No phoney beauty.
@lorenwalters1334 Жыл бұрын
Surprisingly, coloration makes so many of the women look current
@larryace46838 ай бұрын
.... and beautiful
@jgee3369 Жыл бұрын
What a difference color makes‼️ You did a great job.
@XBTHX113811 ай бұрын
I’m enjoying the music most of all !!
@RawSkit19779 ай бұрын
The way they presented and carried themselves was self-respect and pride, unlike these days.
@hulkhatepunybanner7 ай бұрын
*You should watch a movie or read books from that era and then come back and revise your comment.* LOL
@alimantado3737 ай бұрын
Uniformity ignorance and societal pressure you mean! No thanks.
@BrainDamageComedy6 ай бұрын
theres lots and lots of pride today - we even have parades all the time...
@CJ_2226 ай бұрын
society changes, styles change, people change, get over it.
@BrainDamageComedy6 ай бұрын
oh yes it was all great - forget the racism and homophobia (the audacity to tell people where to sit and what well to use and what consenting adults they could have sex with etc).
@roseygirl177711 ай бұрын
In a lot of the photos, there was a sea of blue clothing. A lot of people wore blue in the 1920s because it represented prosperity and wealth. You have done a wonderful job on the colorization. I thoroughly enjoyed your work. I subscribed, and you got a thumbs-up from me. Keep up the good work.
@joescambait Жыл бұрын
it's so weird to think that all these people are deceased now whereas there was one point in my life that these people were alive . im 57...really makes you think about mortality
@booberry671510 ай бұрын
Funny. I'm 54 and I was just thinking that very same thing then stumbled onto your comment. These people were my grandfather's age. He passed in the 90's in his 80's. When girls were girls and men were men.
@UnusSedLeo-w5l10 ай бұрын
@@booberry6715 54 here too and can not agree more!
@piratessalyx787110 ай бұрын
I was thinking the same…all gone, but left their mark somehow
@netescape777110 ай бұрын
On February 5, 2024 a woman in the northern California town of Willits celebrated her 116th birthday. She is the oldest confirmed living person in the USA and a few months younger than the oldest in the world living in Spain. There are many other people well over a century still alive and it's possible one or more could have been pictured in any of these photographs.
@joescambait10 ай бұрын
@@netescape7771 sure its possible but not likely ... take in for account the majority of people are older than 20 in most of these pics you would have been a infant or toddler or small child when these were taken. my comment was more about mortality than facts about maybe 1 or 2 people might still be alive today
@Shipfixer Жыл бұрын
Very classy and well put together! The color just gives everything more depth and detail. Thank you for all the effort it must have taken. Instant LIKE & SUBSCRIBE!
@jamesknauf636 Жыл бұрын
Bravo. Pumping up the color was brilliant. These seem to the most lifelike vintage photos I’ve ever see. thanks!
@valentinius624 ай бұрын
Many of the colors are still too muted in my view. Seems we can't quite get out of the black and white aesthetics of pre Kodachrome decades. Sort of a retro time prejudice or something.
@meowmeowmeowser634910 ай бұрын
Everyone was classy looking 🥰🙌
@strong29236 ай бұрын
These photos are absolutely breathtaking!
@thoughtank10198 ай бұрын
It's amazing how well dressed and groomed everyone was back then.
@michaelwoehl88223 ай бұрын
Some of best colorization I've seen, great job. No one is overweight here either, if anything everyone looks to be pretty good shape versus us today.
@Sky_King54 Жыл бұрын
Well Done My Friend! I can watch your videos all day, THANK YOU VERY MUCH.
@tjmcguire94177 ай бұрын
Thank you. You have managed to put 'human-ness' and colour back into history. Sweetly done. Your soundtrack choices are a fine companion. This is impressive and just flat out good.
@elosz26308 ай бұрын
De très belles images, la qualité des couleurs est bluffante, les personnes étaient élégantes, c'est très joli à regarder, merci.
@boaz737410 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@VintageTreasuresVideos10 ай бұрын
Thank you, means a lot ❤️
@heleneculioli-atwood699711 ай бұрын
Slim, very slim and elegant. Not like today’s.
@adamhuffman335411 ай бұрын
Yea and WOW the clothes! Sophisticated but stylish. No trashy looking t shirts.
@jurgenbaumgartel369 ай бұрын
Wonderful pictures. Many thanks
@edwardprice14010 ай бұрын
Love to have a hat shop back then.
@ratatat9790Ай бұрын
😂
@marianavictoriariadigossca486410 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing these amazing coloured pictures of that golden age!!! Women got rid of the corsets for ever. Art Deco, cinema, dry law, l Iove this period of time!!!!
@bobgriffith181011 ай бұрын
The jazz touch us great
@pammienakh Жыл бұрын
Great job! Captures the era very well.
@apfelsnutz Жыл бұрын
Wonderful old fotos, masterfully recreated...Thank You !
@OLD_SOUL1900 Жыл бұрын
Thanks SO much for this!😁 They're all so beautiful...you truly brought them to life. Astounding job!😉😚
@MrArdytube9 ай бұрын
Great job colorizing… thanks so much❤
@michaellawrence5492 Жыл бұрын
A significant difference noticed between Americans of then to now is percentage carried body fat seen with any class of people from age to heritage. They were far leaner than today's over all and we all know why.
@garrick707611 ай бұрын
From sugar and processed carbs.
@garytorresani884610 ай бұрын
And no factory raised cows and chickens. No fast food garbage.
@iiredeyeiiredeye156910 ай бұрын
I think Mr Ronald McDonald deserves a special mention on this topic.
@Coolcarting10 ай бұрын
Where did yoe find this information? I also find it a bit odd that you mention percentage, but didn't state what that percentage is? i think you just made this up in your head .
@iiredeyeiiredeye156910 ай бұрын
A quick google search says 40% of Americans are Obese(That's the best part of 150 million people)...18% are severely Obese...most of the people in these photos appear to be of normal body weight...Sorry but it's not rocket science.@@Coolcarting
@svensergehamann166910 ай бұрын
Very well done Sir! Thanks for your work! Amazing....
@RJGuitar0710 ай бұрын
Wonderful job! Fantastic colorization which really brings the feeling of the era to life. We have gained some things in the last 100 years but we have lost a whole lot too!
@SunShine-dk6rk Жыл бұрын
Hi Vintage Treasures, this vid really bring's the Roaring 20s back to life, great colour and music plus lot's of well chosen content, thank you. Best wishes and Success for 2024 to yourself,loved ones and fellow viewers ❤❤❤.
@QuBoadicea69 Жыл бұрын
Your period-matching music makes your site a cut above other vintage sites that don’t have that synchronicity which adds so very much to the overall (great) presentation! Well done !
@dougs78records6411 ай бұрын
The music in this video is from the 1950', not the 20'.
@scottrawlins816510 ай бұрын
True@@dougs78records64
@roxieolson4015Ай бұрын
This time in history people weren't consumed with themselves. They worked hard, played when time allowed, and gave to family and friends. They knew how to find happiness where they were and with what they had. It's nice to see what was...not all was good and perfect but it was a time of community, caring about your neighbors and knowing what was happening in your city and country. It seems like during this period there was a foundation to life. Today's generations have lost this...more shallow...me,me,me. My parents were from this period in history, and I treasure the stories they shared. Feel very blessed the way we were raised.
@MousePotato10 ай бұрын
The more I watch these kinds of videos the more I realise this is going to happen to me, all of us. Nameless faces on a screen.
@_clement_shade10 ай бұрын
not me. - i'm going to be a star and people are going to love me and travel far and wide to hear me speak
@dr.skipkazarian555610 ай бұрын
Great photos (along with written newspaper narratives) and equally great music...that's a rare picture of Duke Kahanamoku....thank you!
@Ryan-bc2wh10 ай бұрын
I would love to go back and live in the 20's before the depression hit just to see and feel what it was like.
@hulkhatepunybanner7 ай бұрын
*Get all your vaccinations first.* And don't get too close to anyone or you might give them COVID19.
@ankhpom92966 ай бұрын
If you were white and at least middle class those were the good days.
@thatgirlshae69137 ай бұрын
You did amazing!! The girls in the thumbnail were SO SO beautiful!!
@pauljohnson1325 Жыл бұрын
you did a great job restoring those photos some of the best work I've seen in a long time I look forward to your next video
@debbiegarland71245 ай бұрын
I loved the way things were in glass, bring back glass ❤ thanks, very well done
@luisnavarro9307 Жыл бұрын
good job with the coloring of the photos, very impressive.
@Victoria1882.10 ай бұрын
Спасибо за качественную работу ! Получила огромное удовольствие от просмотра.
@RockinRedbyrd11 ай бұрын
The color is amazing. I wonder how much time and dedication it takes you to make the pics look the way they do. So thank you for sharing. Had to check out the color pics of the 1920s. I love the fashion of both the women and men of those times. From clothes, shoes, hats, and hair styles. I wonder if I can get away with wearing today. Hmmmm .....maybe😊
@PiggyFuktoy Жыл бұрын
I once owned a house that was built in 1921, these photos feel so right for it and has made my experience with it so much deeper … thank you !
@clarkgriswald99097 ай бұрын
Who knew blue was such a popular color in the 1920s? Other than that, very nicely done.
@debraparker833 Жыл бұрын
Nice photos and at the same time it saddens me that at festivals or other celebrations I don’t see people of color participating. The 1920s was my grandma’s time. She faced a lot of struggles coming to the mainland from Hawaii. RIP Grandma.
@ghost-user5596 ай бұрын
And now that they have, none of those festivals are safe, one demographic is responsible for these problems, and they are all shutting down. It’s not a pleasant reality but it is real. They are telling people they cant go to spring break in Florida, and Mardi Gras is very restricted, and most of the beaches and former nightlife areas have curfews or are very risky to even drive around now. Unfortunately we are not in a utopia, in fact your Grandma would be far more at a physical risk now than she was discomforted then.
@celestialfox92824 ай бұрын
My all time favorite era. Love it. Beautifully done.
@VintageTreasuresVideos11 ай бұрын
Hi everyone, there was a little hiccup, and the descriptions for the colorized images got lost. I've reuploaded the video WITH the descriptions: kzbin.info/www/bejne/pJOommumos52atk
@yeshualionofjudah710710 ай бұрын
I'm new here, do you have anything from the 19th century especially civil war Era?
@Saskinny10 ай бұрын
Great channel! And a great job on the colorizing! There were a few surprises with Charlie Chaplin and Thomas Edison! You have a new subscriber!
@richardcasey44398 ай бұрын
How true
@Turco9497 ай бұрын
Just about everyone looks fit and lively! Great job with the photos!
@seus27318 ай бұрын
the mama cat with her baby ❤❤❤❤❤
@christineleech50527 күн бұрын
Just BEAUTIFUL THANK YOU SOOOO MUCH! I just subscribed
@bukeksiansu2112 Жыл бұрын
When people were real people.
@eleanorestes247311 ай бұрын
I’m sorry, what exactly do you mean? I enjoy these photographs so much, but you’re implying that me, my parents, even my grandparents aren’t real people? That’s absurd. Times change. For better or worse. But we are as real as the people depicted in these photographs. Try and appreciate all of it. Don’t you consider you and yours real people?
@bukeksiansu211211 ай бұрын
@@eleanorestes2473 No, I'm just a bot.
@eleanorestes247311 ай бұрын
@@bukeksiansu2112haha! Fair enough.
@bukeksiansu211211 ай бұрын
@@eleanorestes2473 Keep save and healthy for you and fam. God bless you all.
@histubeness10 ай бұрын
The people in the video may have been "real", but the two A. I. generated click bait girls used for this were totally fake.
@ankhpom92966 ай бұрын
The picture of all traffic being stopped to allow the dog and its pup cross the street is something!
@gogoyubari366 Жыл бұрын
Pretty girls back then!
@BrandonD Жыл бұрын
Yes not like the fake today. Nothing like natural beauty
@vanillaexplosion99 Жыл бұрын
@@mkkuusisto6222 Like minded , that look at the past for guidance, should all unite and form a new nation based on the best of our past. Keep time and culture at a standstill, if you don't like it you can leave for another land. Protect such a land with a strong nuclear deterrent.
@Peaceful-Sheep8 ай бұрын
Normal figures back then too. It seems people have forgotten what real women actually looked like. Today's standard requires body modification and cosmetic surgery to be beautiful and desirable.
@ilanamillion89424 ай бұрын
Excellent photo selection and the colourization is superb.
@Mike-e1b4h11 ай бұрын
I was born in 1925. And im still here? 😁
@JackF99 Жыл бұрын
Fantastic job. I really enjoyed this. When I watched it I actually played 1920s music in the background. Added just a nice finishing touch.
@jonesy585 Жыл бұрын
I was born in 1980 my grandparents were born in 1918 and 1924 , it’s incredible to think these women were likely born in the 1880s and 90s to be young adults in 1920 . My grandparents were mier children in this time it seams like such a long time yet oddly familiar at the same time and in hindsight when someone in the year 2500 looks back at this time he will see someone born in 1880 and 1980 like me as part of the same era . I now get the meaning or “row row row your boat gentle down the stream merely merely life is but a dream.
@AmbientAuteur10 ай бұрын
Some great images there.
@johnledger3010 Жыл бұрын
Stunning video, shame there are no sub titles for each photo.
@adsubia8567 Жыл бұрын
Yes pity😒😒
@kisschicken10 ай бұрын
Love your content. Can you do old photos of Puerto Rico?
@natalliaf63877 ай бұрын
sad to realize that a lot of these folks have passed on. R.I.P.
@charlieterry64838 ай бұрын
the pictures have a different appeal to them being in color also people looked more peaceful and relaxed and enjoyed what they were doing compared to now time! thanks for sharing these.
@scenicenglish7465 Жыл бұрын
1:27 I love the big sign in the back that says 'cash talks' 😁
@alphadog3384 Жыл бұрын
Still does!
@ganeshiyer9672Ай бұрын
Excellent video. The photos look like they were taken yesterday.
@xxryder1 Жыл бұрын
I subscribed but captions would add to our enjoyment!
@SapiophileGoddess10 ай бұрын
There’s a link at the beginning of the Comment section to a version with descriptions. 🙂
@JLamont4511 ай бұрын
Great Band, the piano player sounds suspiciously ahead of his time. Those George Shearing block chords we’re not being used during the 1920s, it sounds absolutely cool but it is a touch out of place here! Still I love it and the song is absolutely off the charts!
@Alishtimlilgal11 ай бұрын
No one has a tattoo. Looks like psychologically these were healthy people.
@Lemonstreetsmusic10 ай бұрын
It's fascinating looking back on historical images - enhanced through colour. Well done - keep it up
@danielthoman7324 Жыл бұрын
Knowing what I know now, if I could pick a decade to live in it would be the 50s. I remember it when I was a youngster.😅😅
@Tubes12AX7k Жыл бұрын
Don't forget about polio, though. People smoked a lot back then, too. And factories sent chemicals and smoke straight into the air, unabated. But by and large, it was a much calmer, happier time, and people were generally quite decent to each other.
@akferren110 ай бұрын
Polio was ddt poisoning
@melissagerber723110 ай бұрын
Except for minorities.@@Tubes12AX7k
@thejetshowlive10 ай бұрын
I loved that they showed Duke Kahanamoku "The Big Kahuna", Godfather of american surfing on here!
@radikusmanov757410 ай бұрын
How our days will look like in future 2120 year.
@johanp83918 ай бұрын
You've done a great job with the photos. It's as though they were filmed originally in colour.
@jorgecampos965910 ай бұрын
The food big brother is feeding us is making us sick,obese and cutting our lifespans
@ankhpom92966 ай бұрын
Big brother is this case is the corporate food monopoly. But you know you do not have to buy factory made food. Eat less too.
@Tanna-Marra2 ай бұрын
Enjoyed the watch!
@EduardoTorres-ik7tx Жыл бұрын
I like It, but you should insert date, site etc
@handsomemarco2910 ай бұрын
Seeing this brings life into the past, makes it more interesting then the colorless photos.
@Kim-ri1hg11 ай бұрын
20’s 30’s 40’s and 50’s great American classic times.
@ratatat9790Ай бұрын
Yes.. and none of those decades need an apostrophe.
@michaelhorton13508 ай бұрын
Came for the pix, remained for tunes. Nice list.
@johngreenhorn885310 ай бұрын
39 seconds,back right,think that could well be Jack Johnson the first black world heavyweight boxing champion.