In 2004 I spent a day driving around Detroit taking photographs of places where I used to live and of other houses family members lived in. The angle of this house fit almost perfectly with the photograph taken in 1951 of my father with my little sister Pearl and me. We are in front of the parsonage on Atkinson. My father was the minister of St. Mark's Presbyterian Church, two block up the street on the corner of 12th Street and Atkinson. My sister and I shared the bedroom on the upper left. We used to look out of the side window into the attic of Carol and Deborah. They were our age and lived next door and got to stay up much later then we did. They had a wonderful playroom in the attic. I taught Pearl to read by the streetlight shinning into our bedroom. I don't know why we waited until we were supposed to be in the bed to teach and learn reading. On the other side lived Eleanor Gross, was our babysitter during the rare times our parents were out. My paternal grandparents lived down the street and I have a 2004 photograph of that house which I think I will mix with one from the 1950's. I was trying to think of someone still in Detroit that I could get to take a photo from the proper angle of St. Mark's. I like this assignment!
Sunday, August 7, 2011
Then and Now - Saturday Night Fun (a day late)
The "Saturday Night Fun" assignment from Randy Seaver at Genea-Musings (along with some of the fine results) can be found here. It involved picking out a photograph to use in this challenge for August 16 by the Family Curator. For the original challenge you hold up an old photograph and match it up to the present day scene. This means you have to be in the area. Unfortunately, I live far from the sites of my past and that of my ancestors so I was am not able to do this exactly. I also was not able to just choose my photo and let it go at that. Here is what I did.
In 2004 I spent a day driving around Detroit taking photographs of places where I used to live and of other houses family members lived in. The angle of this house fit almost perfectly with the photograph taken in 1951 of my father with my little sister Pearl and me. We are in front of the parsonage on Atkinson. My father was the minister of St. Mark's Presbyterian Church, two block up the street on the corner of 12th Street and Atkinson. My sister and I shared the bedroom on the upper left. We used to look out of the side window into the attic of Carol and Deborah. They were our age and lived next door and got to stay up much later then we did. They had a wonderful playroom in the attic. I taught Pearl to read by the streetlight shinning into our bedroom. I don't know why we waited until we were supposed to be in the bed to teach and learn reading. On the other side lived Eleanor Gross, was our babysitter during the rare times our parents were out. My paternal grandparents lived down the street and I have a 2004 photograph of that house which I think I will mix with one from the 1950's. I was trying to think of someone still in Detroit that I could get to take a photo from the proper angle of St. Mark's. I like this assignment!
In 2004 I spent a day driving around Detroit taking photographs of places where I used to live and of other houses family members lived in. The angle of this house fit almost perfectly with the photograph taken in 1951 of my father with my little sister Pearl and me. We are in front of the parsonage on Atkinson. My father was the minister of St. Mark's Presbyterian Church, two block up the street on the corner of 12th Street and Atkinson. My sister and I shared the bedroom on the upper left. We used to look out of the side window into the attic of Carol and Deborah. They were our age and lived next door and got to stay up much later then we did. They had a wonderful playroom in the attic. I taught Pearl to read by the streetlight shinning into our bedroom. I don't know why we waited until we were supposed to be in the bed to teach and learn reading. On the other side lived Eleanor Gross, was our babysitter during the rare times our parents were out. My paternal grandparents lived down the street and I have a 2004 photograph of that house which I think I will mix with one from the 1950's. I was trying to think of someone still in Detroit that I could get to take a photo from the proper angle of St. Mark's. I like this assignment!
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Wow, those two pictures really do match up well. Even the shrubs and the lawn blend seamlessly between the two pictures.
ReplyDeleteO.M.G.! That's one of the best match-ups I've seen! Good job!
ReplyDeleteI looked at that challenge and decided right away that I didn't have the skills. Now I'm thinking I should at least try to do it. Great job!
ReplyDeleteYou did an awesome job!
ReplyDeleteinteresting concept, and i couldn't have expected anything less from you. great job!!
ReplyDelete:)~
HUGZ
Superb.
ReplyDeleteThank you, thank you. it took a bit of changing the size of the front photo and transforming the background photo.
ReplyDeleteKathy, you should try it. it is fun.
Th transparency in the front photo is creepy - but creepy in a good way. Excellent work!
ReplyDeleteThat is very clever and well worth the effort.
ReplyDeleteJust stunning. This should be framed.
ReplyDelete