#1 Just Retired After 42 Years As An Obstetrical Nurse, At The Same Hospital. Here I Am At The Start (1979) And End Of My Career!

#2 Katherine Johnson, "Human Computer", Famously Calculated The Flight Trajectory For Alan Shepard, The First American In Space, In 1962

There's something irresistibly endearing about old pictures, be they a grainy sepia portrait from the early 20th century or a sun-bleached snapshot from the 1980s or 1990s. In those old photos, the specks of dust and faintly blurred edges seem like battle scars from years hanging out in attic trunks, rendering every face and wardrobe an aura of long-standing enigma.
But look a few generations ahead to Polaroids' soft focus or color-faded 90s photographs, and we find a new type of cool: the unapologetic air of analog inadvertence and wistfulness for decades marked by big hair, neon windbreakers, and heartsick earnest smiles.
#6 Mogadishu, 1993. An Italian Soldier Gives Food To A Local Orphan

Part of it is the appearance of the 80s and 90s themselves. Picture a Polaroid holiday self-portrait taken with a throwaway camera: the edge used to trim off half a face or shear off an arm, but catching an openness we nostalgically idealize. That off-color pastel background dye, that overexposure of the flash, that fading of color to magenta or green after a few years, these imperfections are nostalgic and endearing.
#9 An East German Soldier Passing A Flower Through The Berlin Wall Before It Was Torn Down, 1989

The hi-top haircuts, acid-wash jeans, chunky sneakers and shoulder pads look retro in hindsight, as if each look was a deliberate fashion statement and not something slapped on at the last minute to run out to a video store or mixtape swap. In previous eras, having one's photo taken was an unofficial event, folks dressed up, did not move, looked solemnly.
#12 A Great Dane Riding Shotgun In A Sports Car. Hollywood, California 1961

But by the 80s and 90s, photography had become more casual but was still analog: you snapped a photo, waited on edge for the film to be developed or for prints to return from the drugstore, and then riffled through the envelope hoping that at least one of them had you blinking on time. That uncertainty, the tactile experience of holding a fresh photo in your hand, gives these photographs a tangible warmth.
#13 A Sailor's Request For An Extraordinary Leave Of Absence, 1967

These days, the lack of filters or immediate retakes causes those imperfect smiles and candid poses in 80s/90s pictures to have that refreshingly genuine feel. The poses themselves in 80s/90s pictures look hilariously overconfident: groups of friends huddled around a boombox, someone mid-air jumping over a skateboard, or a family posing for a family photo in matching sweaters that now resemble time capsules.
#16 The Shambles In York (UK) Inspiration For Diagon Alley From Harry Potter. Late 1800s And Today

There's a quality of freshness to these photographs, you can almost hear the sound of the music on the cassette or smell the hairspray, yet they are imbued with a sure nonchalance. In retrospect, what was once perhaps uncool or ordinary now looks heroic, as if each picture was recording a fleeting moment of defiance against homogeneity.
#19 Immigrant Family At Ellis Island, Looking At New York's Skyline, 1925















