On Monday we took a look at computational rephotography, a technique for making a new photo exactly match the point-of-view of an old photo. Today we take a look at a gallery of photos showing ...
Have you ever noticed that people in old photographs looks a bit weird? Deep wrinkles, sunken cheeks, and exaggerated blemishes are commonplace in photos taken up to the early 20th century. Surely not ...
Rephotography is the act of taking a new version of an existing photograph to create a "then and now" view of a location. The two images can then be compared, highlighting what has changed and what ...
When Garry Pycroft came to Denver for a business conference this spring, he made sure to save time to photograph some of Denver’s most iconic landmarks. And then rephotograph them. Pycroft is a native ...
Computational rephotography is a fancy name for photos taken from the exact same viewpoint as an old photograph. Actually, that's just rephotography. The "computational" part is when software helps ...
Time-Travel Rephotography has debuted a new way to restore images, despite being hundreds of years old that use artificial intelligence (AI) to determine skin color and lighting when it was taken.
MANHATTAN — In 1867, Alexander Gardner documented the progress of American civilization as he traveled across Kansas, developing photographs in a darkroom set up in the back of a wagon. Land-grant ...
Some pairings of old and new photographs of Chaco Canyon sites depict what appears to be reverse aging. The truth is that preservationists have rebuilt walls, roomblocks, and kivas so the structures ...
Rephotography is the act of taking a new version of an existing photograph to create a "then and now" view of a location. The two images can then be compared, highlighting what has changed and what ...
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