Comparing Faces in Old Family Photos
Here they are again. I'm enamored of this photo; it's a layered puzzle with many clues. In my first post about it I examined the clothing details and asked for additional information. In the second post, we considered the other couples in the family that married in the 1880s. William...
View DetailsHow to Identify the Right Couple in an Old Wedding Photo
In the recent post 3 Clues to Identify Family in Old Wedding Photos, I asked a series of questions relating to this image belonging to William Davis: This week, I'm back with more information.The clothing clues in this picture, including the woman's front-pleated skirt and her bodice...
View DetailsOld Movies: Study These Three Clues. Tell the Story.
Romney, WV, March 1938. Library of Congress. Another Oscar statuette has been bestowed upon a movie of the year (not withstanding some painful-to-watch onstage confusion when the presenters announced the wrong Best Picture winner due to an envelope mixup). My family has a long history of being film...
View Details3 Clues to Identify the Ancestors in Old Wedding Photos
Dr. William Davis dated this photo in his collection to sometime between 1860 and 1890. It once hung in his parents' house, but he can't remember which side of the family it represents. The photo documents the wedding of one of Dr. Davis' ancestors...
View DetailsHow to Take the Headache Out Of Old Confusing Photos
Carol Tear has a photos that's full of contradictions. It's enough to give a genealogist a headache, but it doesn't have to. She thinks this is Hannah Marquart Obenshain (born in 1788, dies sometime between 1850 and 1860). With a bit of research and family data, some of the identity...
View Details3 Old Photo Stories You Can Tell Today
What are you going to do with all your old photos? You can tuck them away for safekeeping or you can use them to tell your family about their ancestors. Or, you can do both. Your original prints belong in acid- and lignin-free boxes, but you can use...
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3 Easy Best Practices For the Photos You Take Today
Trust me. Your descendants will thank you if you follow these three best practices. Our ancestors didn't take as many pictures as we do today. They had film cameras or had to go to a studio to document a moment. A photo do-over wasn't as easy as it...
View DetailsOld Photos: The Secret Ingredient to Discovering Family History
You're probably wondering what I mean by photo clues being the secret ingredient. Think of your family history as a recipe. In my grandmother's terms, that would consist of a pinch of this and a pinch of that. Genealogy is the same way: We look at...
View DetailsOn the Web: Breathtaking Panoramic Photos of Ancestors’ Towns
The next time you need a break, don't book a plane ticket. First take a trip into the past in a panoramic photo. The Library of Congress has quite a collection. A panoramic photo can be a single image or a set of pictures aligned together that offer an expansive...
View DetailsThe Most Important Question To Ask Cousins About Old Photos
Way back in the 1990s, Roma Bennett's cousin gave her this photo. At the time her cousin told her she didn't know anything about this tintype. Hmmm. In my experience, people usually know something about a picture, but they don't know they know it until you ask the...
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