Dear Photograph Anniversary Edition
August 19, 2013 marks the fifth year of World Photography Day, a online global event celebrating photography by anyone with a camera — amateurs and professionals. The Family Curator participated in 2011 by hosting the Past is Present Photo Challenge and publishing a gallery of great family history photos submitted by bloggers and genealogists. You can read the original challenge here, or visit the participating bloggers below.
My contribution was a Dear Photograph style image created with Mr. Curator when we visited the church where we were married to snap Dear Photograph: 35th Wedding Anniversary Edition, above.
Check out these inspiring and creative contributions to the Past is Present Photo Challenge and start planning now for your entry in 2014! Check The Family Curator for more details in future months.
Past is Present World Photography Day Challenge
2011 Participants
Geni Webb responded to the challenge “It’s not an easy thing to do but it sure was fun” and presents a back-to-school image that combines student and teacher for The “Past is Present” Photo Challenge on Ginisology. Thanks, Geni for kick-off the challenge and getting out the word.
Randy Seaver’s post for Saturday Night Genealogy Fun — Pick Your Past Photos for the Present Photo Challengehelped to spread the news about the Past is Present Photo Project. Randy’s selected three photos… and it will be fun to see what he comes up with… one of these Saturnday nights!
Dorene participated in GeneaMusings Saturday Night Genealogy Fun, August 6, 2011 to showcase photos of her great grandmother standing in front of her apartment building in Sandusky, Ohio. It was a tough shot to capture, and Dorene posts her photos at Graveyard Rabbit of Sandusky Bay.
Chris Staats at Staats Place was determined to participate in the project, even if he had to get creative with Photoshop. His post SNGF: Staats Not Gonna Follow [the rules again] pulls together a collage that includes the image of a hand holding one of the photos. Very ingenious.
Karen Seeman at Ancestor Soup brought the past to the present by placing an image of herself with her grandmother and great-grandmother in a present day photo of their old house to make Memories Past… Then and Now.
Jean of Bluegrass and Buckeye Roots featured a past family home tour for her post SGF – a little late, but looking at family houses. Although the images aren’t “superimposed,” she says, the pages “capture the times together” and isn’t that what it’s all about?
Valerie enlisted her sister’s help for a Dear Photograph style image that she calls “Looking Into the Past” for her post SNGF: Present Photo Challenge at Begin with ‘Craft’. Valerie has also used the technique on an earlier postfeaturing photos taken in cemeteries, and shares her technique tips as well.
Jasia took a trip to a Detroit cemetery to visit the grave of her great grandmother Ludwika. Her Dear Photograph image at Creative Gene is a poignant letter to one day in 1912, remembered “with Love from her great Granddaughter Jasia” at Genealogy Photo Challenge for World Photography Day.
Julie Goucher at Angler’s Rest features the graves of her great grandparents in Surrey in Genealogy Photo Challenge – The Past is Present, and shares an interesting note about her grandmother’s death and lead-lined coffin.
Kim Adams hadn’t heard of Dear Photograph when the Photo Challenge was announced, but soon realized that she had already taken “THE perfect ‘Dear Photograph’ photo!” featured in One hundred seventeen years later… My answer to the Genealogy Photo Challenge at GeneaMania.
Vickie Everhart is certainly the MacGyver of the Past is Present Challenge. After viewing her beautiful photograph at Sentimental Sunday::Meadows of Heaven be sure to see how she set up the shot at Then and Now on Be Not Forgot.
Kristin combined photos from Google Images with pictures of her family from 1946-1950 to bring her family into 2011 for Past is Present – Springfield Massachusetts 1948 – 1950 at My Cleages and Reeds.
Kay Bauman showcases her grandparents home in Then and Now on Relative Storyboards, and recounts her memories of a a very special place.
Cynthia Shenette showcases two photographs of the Chopin Statue on Heritage Zen in a poignant post entitled Chopin Rising, writing about loss and hope for the future.