Keeping memories alive can be done in many ways, but photographs are probably one of the most common ones. Photos capture a moment in history, memory and serve as a reminder of how it used to be. However, really old photographs are in black and white, so it’s often hard to relate to them and see yourself in that time.
That’s where digital artist Sébastien de Oliveira comes in. Sébastien uses Photoshop to color old photographs and give them more life. The people in the photos look much more realistic and the pictures become so much more inviting.
Sébastien told Bored Panda: “Sébastien de Oliveira, French, father Portuguese and mother French, I live in Paris, married, two daughters. For my background, I studied in a school of fine art in Orléans, with my specialization in illustration and photography, then I moved to Milan where I lived for 7 years and worked as an illustrator for architects and as an assistant for a fashion illustrator. I moved to Paris 17 years ago to become a retoucher for the fashion industry.”
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Audrey Hepburn (1929-1993) In 1956
“I began 5 years ago to colorize some images and it became unstoppable. My three passions can combine themselves in colorization: painting, photography, and history. I spend lots of time finding images that tell a story. After spending some time on WW1 and WW2 images, now I am more interested in simple street views or peaceful ‘tranche de vie’ (pieces of everyday life) or colorizing portraits of actors from the golden age of Hollywood. I like to get into all the details that can be found in a photo and try to give my own interpretation.”
Circus Girls In Sarasota, Florida, By Nina Leen In 1949
Happy Anonymous Couple, 1948
“I collect old color photos as references to inspire me and to avoid anachronisms, but my colorizations are more a dreamed version of the reality than a will to give the perfection of what would have been seen by a modern camera. My references are more the saturated colors of the cinema from the ’50s, or the Autochromes of the Lumière brothers, where the color is more impressionist than realistic. I recently worked for the Vuitton book Extraordinary Voyages, where 20 colorizations were published. I mounted an exhibition in Dunkirk with 40 colorizations of photos of a woman photographer from the town during the German Occupation in WW2. I began to share my work only 3 months ago on Instagram and already have encountered really good feedback.”
Blue Island, Illinois. The Senise Family Going To The Movie, By Jack Delano, Feb 1943
Chicago, 1941
Sébastien de Oliveira told us why he colorizes photos and how he got into it: “At the beginning, it was my hobby, but it is becoming a big part of my activity now, I am a photo retoucher and I work for the fashion industry in Paris. I have a background in Fine Arts studies so I paint and I take photos. My other passion was history, so I found a way to combine my three passions in one.”
Parisian Girls Enjoying The Fun Fair, Paris, 1935
War Time Beach On An English Coast, 1941
The artist shares the most difficult part of colorizing photos: “I have a method so all the different stages are under control and not really difficult by themselves but the most difficult is always to choose a color for people’s clothing, because of the immensity of choice.”
New York In 1942, By Marjory Collins
Jacqueline Cochran, (1906-1980), 1939
Sébastien shared his favorite and least favorite time periods to work with: “I love the street views from the ’40s and ’50s with rounded cars and people wearing costumes, it is always so cinematographic! My favorite time period is the American ’40s and I don’t know why, but I like that era for the lack of plastic, the beauty of the cars and clothes, and the link it makes with the cinema of this period. My least favorite would be the beginning of the century 1900, you never know how to color the people’s clothes!”
Along The California Highway Us99, 1937. By Dorothea Lange
Family Of Cherry Pickers By John Vachon, 1940
“I started these colorizations 5 years ago and don’t want to stop any time soon. I inspire myself with old color photos, autochromes, cinema pictures from the past, so my style is quite saturated, with vivid colors. My research is not realism, it is more pictural, impressionist, the subjects are often happy and peaceful. What also inspires me is the immensity of the black and white photos, great photos, beautiful photos, that are fantastic as they are but can also get rediscovered with the process of colorization.”
Cars And Girls, 1942
Saturday Afternoon In Florence, Alabama, June 1942. By Arthur Rothstein
Sébastien gives advice to people who want to colorize pictures as well: “My advice would be to observe the reality, the light, the reflections, the effects and interaction of the colors in the real life to collect old color photos from the past and use them as references, but also open your eyes to the painters that have already done this work and transposed it in their paintings.”
Althea Gibson Winner Of The Wimbledon Championship With Her Compatriot Darlene Hard, 1957
Bar At Central Park In New York By Marjory Collins, 1942
Sébastien shares what he looks for in a photo before deciding what to colorize: “I look for a story to tell, like a moment of a movie, and also a good composition, but also a good definition because the better the definition is, the more beautiful the colorization will be.”
Washington In 1935
Bergman, Hemphrey Bogart And Michael Curtis On The Set Of “Casablanca” 1939
The artist tells us more about himself: “I come from the French countryside near Chartres, completed art studies in Orléans, I moved to Milan and lived there for 7 years. I found my future wife there and we moved to Paris. I now have two daughters. I worked as an illustrator for architects, assistant of a fashion illustrator and now as a photo retoucher. I would be pleased if I could do colorization as my main activity!”
Anonymous, France, 1967
American Soldier Return Home After Worldwar 1, 1919
“I worked recently for a Vuitton Book ‘Extraordinaries voyages’ where 20 colorizations were published and for Oppo and Getty Images for collaboration with Wimbledon, where 9 images were produced. I have done already 4 different exhibitions, the most important was in Dunkirk where 40 colorizations were shown. The project was colorizing images from a woman photographer called Adeline Debaene-Kiscoms who photographed her city Dunkirk and the habitats during the German occupation of WW2.”
Young Actresses Having A Sun Bath For A Film Promotion During The Cannes Film Festival, 1955
Spectators At A Race In Worthington, Maryland, By Marion Post Wolcott. 1941
Family Picnic Along The Cane River Near Natchitoches, Louisiana, By Marion Post Wolcott, 4th July 1940
Texas, 1939
Glen Echo Park, Montgomery County, Maryland, April 1943
Rainy Day In Pittsburgh, By John Vachon, June 1941
Marilyn Monroe Resting On The Set Of The Misfits, By Eve Arnold, 1960
O’reilly Bar, New York, By Marjory Collins. 1942
Waiting For The Bus, 1943
French Soldiers On Leave In Paris, Gare de l’Est, 1916
Union Station, Chicago By Jack Delano, 1943
Modesto, California By Dorothea Lange, 1937
American Soldiers Training, 1942
Magicians Convention, Chicago, 1947
Anonymous, 1946
Fifth Avenue At 44th Street, New York By Dorothea Lange, July 1939
Ambridge Pennsylvania, 1941. Photo By John Vachon
Students Of The Woodrow Wilson High School, Washington, D.C. By Esther Bubley, 1943
Coming Out Of The Church, Chicago, Illinois, Apr 1941. By Lee Russell
Ava Gardner, 1922-1990, In 1944
French Soldier In The Ruins Of A House, Michelin Advertising Says “Michelin Drink The Obstacle” Note The Pax Graffiti, 1916
Atlanta, Georgia, 1936. By Walker Evans
French Soldier In A Trench, 1916
Baltimore, 1943
Fashion Picture By Georges Dambier, 1948
American Soldier Eating His Ration K During A Training. 1942
Omaha, Nebraska, 1938
New York, 1941
Soldiers In Starke, Florida, By Marion Post Wolcott, 1940
New York, By Marjory Collins, September 1942
Customers In A Dinner, Greenbelt, Maryland, By Marjory Collins, 1942
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