Monday, April 21, 2025

October 24, 2017

Incredible Original Colour Photos From World War II

You might be shocked to learn that there was actually colour film back in World War II times, and some of the snaps are both beautiful and poignant.

But they didn’t have colour photography back in the early 1940s, did they?

Turns out they did, with they being the British Ministry of Information. The Ministry got hold of a very small quantity of Kodachrome film, dishing it out to a handful of their official photographers to document Word War II.

Before we check those out, some background via CNN:

Only about 3,000 images were taken in total, but not everything has survived: “About half of them went missing and we don’t know where they went,” said [author Ian] Carter. The surviving photos became part of the [Imperial War] Museum’s archives in 1949, and some of them are being published for the first time in 70 years.

Carter is the author of a new book published by the museum, and he stresses that this collection is truly unique:

You are seeing exactly what was taken. I know it’s common these days to see retouched photographs and colorized [sic] black & white photos, but this is the real deal…

They [the photographers] had a very limited amount of film and had to be very careful, therefore they must have had the film in a separate camera and used it for a couple of photos while taking black and white shots…

Alright, I think we’re ready to ogle.

Here are our favourites with a little write-up for each:

A ‘spotter’ at a 3.7-inch anti-aircraft gun site, in December 1942.

Private Alfred Campin of the 6th Battalion, Durham Light Infantry during battle training in Britain, March 1944.

The man in charge of D-Day, General Dwight D Eisenhower and his senior commanders at Supreme Allied Headquarters in London, February 1944.

A crew from the 16th/5th Lancers, 6th Armored Division, clean the gun barrel of their Crusader tank at El Aroussa in Tunisia, May 1943.

5.5-inch gun crew from 75th (Shropshire Yeomanry) Medium Regiment, Royal Artillery, in action in Italy, September 1943.

The RAF’s top-scoring fighter pilot, with 31 confirmed kills at this date, Wing Commander James ‘Johnnie’ Johnson, with his Spitfire and pet Labrador ‘Sally’ in Normandy, July 1944.

31 confirmed kills, people.

I know it sucks that data is expensive and you can’t bath in Cape Town but yoh, that World War II struggle was real.

[source:cnn]