Georgiagranny
Well-known Member
When we were kids, our grandmother would let us look through old photos in the attic...a fun thing to do on a rainy day. Some were truly old, tintypes, sepia prints and lots of black and white pictures taken long before color film was even thought of.
One day when Grampa came home for lunch, my 7-year-old sister asked why the pictures were either brown and white or black and white. Grampa said, "Those were the only colors there were in the old days. There wasn't any color to anything."
My sister was in 7th grade and about 13 when she mentioned it in school because "My grampa told me." She'd believed for years that the sky wasn't blue, grass wasn't green in the old days because, yanno, "There wasn't color to anything." Grampa said so.
Me? It never sNOwed in England. Ireland and Scotland, yes, but England? Nope. Don't know where I got that idea but was in 9th grade the first time I saw "A Christmas Carol." Hm. There was sNOw in that movie. In London. London is in England. It was a revelation for sure.
One day when Grampa came home for lunch, my 7-year-old sister asked why the pictures were either brown and white or black and white. Grampa said, "Those were the only colors there were in the old days. There wasn't any color to anything."
My sister was in 7th grade and about 13 when she mentioned it in school because "My grampa told me." She'd believed for years that the sky wasn't blue, grass wasn't green in the old days because, yanno, "There wasn't color to anything." Grampa said so.
Me? It never sNOwed in England. Ireland and Scotland, yes, but England? Nope. Don't know where I got that idea but was in 9th grade the first time I saw "A Christmas Carol." Hm. There was sNOw in that movie. In London. London is in England. It was a revelation for sure.