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  • 6
    Feb
    2013
    2:17pm, EST

    Delivering mail through snow and rain, the US Postal Service must now weather technology

    Vecchio / Three Lions via Getty Images

    A group of New York postmen set off on foot from the General Post Office to deliver mail in New York City at Christmas, circa 1955.

    By Jonathan Sanger, NBC News

    Updated at 3:29 p.m. ET: The United States Postal Service announced on Wednesday that they will stop Saturday mail deliveries. Email and other forms of electronic communication have made a big dent in the Postal Service's bottom line. From its early start delivering mail on horseback to testing Segways on mail routes, the 273-year-old agency has evolved quite a bit since its beginning.

    Marion Post Wolcott/U.S. Farm Security Administration; Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

    A rural mailman travels up a creek bed toward Morris Fork near Jackson, Ky., in August 1940.; K. Ng rides a Segway on his mail route in July 2002 in San Francisco.

    National Photo Co.; Scott Olson/Getty Images

    Postal workers sort mail in a Washington, D.C., post office circa 1920.; Bobbi Crump moves mail on a conveyor at the USPS Chicago Logistics and Distribution Center in December 2012.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    Slideshow: U.S. Postal Service then and now

    Orlando / Getty Images

    Take a look at the how the USPS has evolved since its beginning.

    Launch slideshow

    2 comments

    Weather technology?? or weather the GOP trying to privatize them.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: us-news, archive, usps, united-states-postal-service
  • 18
    Jan
    2012
    5:44pm, EST

    Colorization of historical works, improvement or blasphemy?

    Photo: Dorothea Lange | Colorization: Sanna Dullaway

    The photograph that has become known as "Migrant Mother" was a 32-year-old mother of seven children photographed in February of 1936 by Dorothea Lange.

    Photo: Alfred Eisenstaedt | Colorization: Sanna Dullaway

    LIFE's Alfred Eisenstaedt captured this scene amid the joyous chaos of August 14, 1945, his "V-J Day in Times Square" has become one of the most famous photographs ever made.

    By Jon Sweeney, NBC News

     

    When Swedish artist Sanna Dullaway colorized a series of historical works from the likes of Eddie Adams and Dorothea Lange her intent was not to re-create history or take credit for adding a new twist to these historical images. All Dullaway wanted to do when she posted a link on Reddit was to show off her talents as an artist.

    Photo: Eddie Adams | Colorization: Sanna Dullaway

    Vietcong Execution in Saigon in 1968 was one of the most iconic images of the Viet Nam war.

    “I only wanted to show everyone a new perspective of the past black & white world.” She wrote in an email. “The sun shone on our grandparents too.”

    "I felt the famous photographs would  best reach and touch everyone who saw them," Dullaway continued.

    When the colorized images went viral, with websites like Gizmodo writing about her works, she realized the impact of what she did. “I never claimed them being my own work nor did I want to ‘improve’ or ‘replace’ them as some people might want to think.”

    When Dullaway realized that she might have infringed on copyrights, she immediately informed imgur to take down the offending material and apologized for her actions on her deviantart.com website. She added this to her status, “Please note I do not take credit for the iconic photos I colourized,” she wrote. “Focus on the photos, not me.”

    Needless to say her images are out there and alive on the internet, and as I look at the manipulations, I have to wonder how many times can history be re-written and when does a piece of art ever stop being modified?

     Gizmodo blogger Jesus Diaz wrote today that these colored famous photos are so much more powerful than their black and white originals, but I have to disagree.  Eddie Adams' photo of the execution captured on the streets of Saigon is more powerful, because it is real. That black and white photo raised the global conscience about the conflict in Vietnam, and helped bring an end to the war. Color or not, it’s one of the most important photos of the 20th century.

    I understand that these images were done not to modify history and should only be taken as entertainment. It’s not the first time that works of art have been digitally altered and it’s definitely not the first time black and white classics have made the leap to color. I remember the first time I saw Ted Turner's colorization of Casablanca. It looked unnatural and like many others I preferred the black and white original. However, on a completely different tune, when DJ Dangermouse mashed the Beatles White Album and Jay-Z's Black Album to create the Grey Album, I had to commend the creativity. But that's art of a different color.

    Ultimately for Dullaway, her experiment got the job done. People are talking about her new colorization business, around the globe, and in this day and age, that’s more than half the battle for an artist. The ability to self-promote is important and she should enjoy the buzz while it lasts, because after it’s over, an artist needs to stand on their own talents and not gimmicks.

    Related links:

    • View Sanna Dullaway's flickr stream
    • Check out Sanna on deviantart.com
    • See other images from her colorization project
    • Read more about the 'Migrant Mother' photo
    • Read more about the Eddie Adams image

    What do you think? Discuss this post in the comments section or hit me on Twitter @sweeneyjon.

    Editor's note: I though it would be worth mentioning that this blog post was modified from its original. Dullaway posted a link to her creations on Reddit, and not a personal blog.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    51 comments

    In my own opinion and picture that is NOT of your work should be left as the photographer (artist) took it. Mess with your own pictures...these are not yours to mess with. They tell a story of a time, a place, an action that we as people were a part of. The picture should stay as is out of respect f …

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    Explore related topics: history, art, world-news, us-news, archive, featured, photo-manipulation, colorization, eddie-adams
  • 7
    Sep
    2010
    10:15am, EDT

    AP file

    The dome of St. Paul's Cathedral in London stands out from the flames and smoke of surrounding buildings during heavy attacks by the German Luftwaffe on Dec. 29, 1940. The German bombers and fighters flew across the English Channel by the hundreds, all intent on destroying London and forcing Britain out of the war and Hitler's way. As they dropped their bombs on the city on Sept. 7, 1940, the barrage signaled the start of the Blitz, the attack on the British mainland by Nazi forces during World War II. On Tuesday, Sept 7, 2010 a memorial service was held at St. Paul's Cathedral itself a symbol of British fortitude during the attacks on the 70th anniversary of the day the Germans focused on non-military targets, and to honor those who protected London during the attacks.

    Harry Shepherd / Fox Photos - Getty Images

    31st December 1943: Searchlights over St Paul's Cathedral during The Blitz.

    Harry Todd / Fox Photos - Getty Images

    17th October 1945: A group of men playing cricket on a blitzed site during their lunch-hour, with St Paul's Cathedral in the background.

    Fox Photos / Getty Images

    19th October 1940: A hole in the roof of St Paul's Cathedral above the altar after the cathedral was hit in a German bombing raid. Debris from the roof is lying in front of the altar.

    'Like a picture of some miraculous figure'

    Today is the 70th anniversary of the beginning of the Blitz. St. Paul's Cathedral still stands, and is still a symbol of Britain's endurance. Memorial services were held there today, and were filmed by the BBC.

    Journalist Ernie Pyle has a lovely description of the church emerging out of an incendiary bomb attack:

    The greatest of all the fires was directly in front of us. Flames seemed to whip hundreds of feet into the air. Pinkish-white smoke ballooned upward in a great cloud, and out of this cloud there gradually took shape - so faintly at first that we weren't sure we saw correctly - the gigantic dome of St. Paul's Cathedral.

    St. Paul's was surrounded by fire, but it came through. It stood there in its enormous proportions - growing slowly clearer and clearer, the way objects take shape at dawn. It was like a picture of some miraculous figure that appears before peace-hungry soldiers on a battlefield. (More here.)

    The cathedral does not make an appearance in the video clip below, but it's worth watching--it's a report on newly released and very rare color film footage of the Blitz:

    4 comments

    While reading NBC anchor Tom Brokaw's The Greatest Generation, I agreed with his assertion that, paraphrased, that US generation was the greatest generation that any society has produced ever. However, I regret he left out the English, whose suffering, fortitude and light at least equaled that of th …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: the, from, world-news, archive

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Jonathan Sanger

Jonathan is an Associate Multimedia Producer for NBCNews.com in New York. He graduated from the Rochester Institute of Technology in 2012, where he studied photojournalism.

Jon Sweeney, NBC News

Multimedia producer for NBC News, father of three, and newly transplanted to New York City.

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