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Article created by: Rūta Zumbrickaitė
Photography plays an important role in understanding history. It provides a view and context for certain situations, and shows what it actually looked like, so people don’t have to rely solely on their imaginations, which can majorly skew things.
What’s also interesting is that while some pictures become popular representations of certain events, other angles of it do not get the same flowers — even though they show just as much of an important, if not more so, context for the situation. So, today we’re shining a light on these pictures of various historical events that are so under-appreciated that only very few people saw them.
#1
Nasa’s Camera From A Million Miles Away Took A Photo Of The Moon In Front Of The Earth
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#3
Young Actors Danny Lloyd And Lisa & Louise Burns In Between Takes Of The Shining At Elstree Studios, 1978
#4
Photo Of A Hiker Watching The Eruption Of Mt. St. Helens From Mt. Adams, About 37 Miles To The East. Photo From Mt Adams By John V. Christiansen Around 8:32 Am Local Time On May 18, 1980 & Published In A 1981 National Geographic Magazine
#7
A Korean News Program Actually Filming On The Top Of The Building Instead Of Using A Green Screen
#8
Charles Ebbets Photographing “Lunch On A Skyscraper”, The Famous Picture Of Workers In NY Eating Their Lunch On A Hanging Steel Beam
#10
The Twin Towers Just After Construction, Showing Their Revolutionairy Near Hollow Architecture
#26
Nirvana During The Photo Shoot For Their Album Nevermind, Which Was Released 30 Years Ago, 1991
#29
’10 Years Ago Today The Office Series Finale Aired And We All Said Goodbye To Dunder Mifflin’
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