Postalsock t1_iz8y6sx wrote
Reply to comment by jeniesque in End of the day at Macy's store on Christmas Eve, New York, 1948. by Limit9087
Colorized. Most color cameras didn't have this detail at the time. This was a good black and white photograph that had color added to it.
King-of-New-York t1_iz91v7f wrote
It’s not the color IMO it’s the store employee wearing what appears to be blue jeans in 1948.
mullse01 t1_iz94527 wrote
…you mean the pants originally designed as workwear, 75 years before this photo was taken?
King-of-New-York t1_iz9956q wrote
Typical Reddit, you ran so fast to put out the snark you forgot to tie your own shoelaces.
Blue jeans as regular everyday fashion for the masses did not come about until the late 1960’s, most low end retail establishments not until the 1990’s.
Oh look; A source that’s not Wikipedia.
https://www.vogue.fr/fashion/article/vogue-encyclopaedia-the-history-of-denim-jeans
mullse01 t1_iz9j6r0 wrote
…except we’re not talking about everyday fashion for the masses.
The man in the photo is (presumably) a custodian—he’s not wearing jeans as a fashion statement, he’s wearing them as workwear.
[deleted] t1_iz9ucst wrote
[removed]
Eastern-Albatross-95 t1_iza3ugv wrote
The irony of your post is just too much. About 3/4 of the way down the page is the original B&W.
https://www.messynessychic.com/2014/05/29/behind-the-scenes-at-macys-1948/
jeniesque t1_iz9859e wrote
no it just seemed like the quality was too high and it didn’t have the look of other colorized photos I’ve seen. But it’s legit.
King-of-New-York t1_iz99o4o wrote
Atypical color process that preceded Autochrome.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sergey_Prokudin-Gorsky
That Autochrome look.
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