Notes

More Info

It should not be a surprise that this topic touches upon other things which Ancient Hixtory has covered. As noted below, past articles provide more depth about several topics, and can be accessed by the links provided here:

Link Description
August 2019 Edition Hicksville's beginnings;
When tunnels made it feasible for commuters to turn L.I. into suburbia
June 2018 Edition WW I brings the Service Flag phenomenon to Hicksville
May 2019 Edition The Hicksville men who died in WW I;
Creation of the WW I Monument

The Distorting Lens of Time

I want to expand on a point I began to make here some months ago. Many times, the quality of the only online photograph of a given subject suffers for at least one of these reasons:

      • It was created under difficult circumstances.
      • It was shot without adequate awareness of film and lighting constraints.
      • Inferior film or processing was used.
      • The resulting picture was stored improperly.

I feel that such flaws usually detract from what the photo should communicate. And so, each month I spend a significant portion of the time I devote to Ancient Hixtory trying to negate the worst flaws in the best photographs I have found. Two examples follow:

The glorious "Hicksville Orange" of the first photograph probably resulted from using outdoor color film with indoor incandescent light. Digitally removing the hue while trying to maintain proper contrast resulted in a less crisp image.

The second photo appears to have been shot through a reflective pane of glass (likely the glass of a picture frame), using color film to capture a monotone image. Dark "fringes" in the corners indicate either a poor lens that failed to illuminate the film evenly, or an improperly-fitted lens hood. As I wanted to give readers a good idea of what Depot Square looked like, without distractions, I leveled the horizon and did some terraforming - aka faking. I digitally created land and vegetation to fill in the absent corners.

I hope that historians of the future have an easier time with today's digital pictures.

Ciao!

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