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I like how the man in the shade under the awning on the porch remains in black and white. The porch is Kansas, the front yard Oz.

In those days some lantern slides were hand coloured. That area was obviously missed.
Or perhaps, the colouring was done recently - the caption doesn't tell us.
 
I wonder if it was missed or the colourist just liked the effect of leaving the man in the shadows in black and white.
 
In those days some lantern slides were hand coloured. That area was obviously missed.
Or perhaps, the colouring was done recently - the caption doesn't tell us.

Most of the red brick in Toronto (and other cities) slowly turned black or grey due to the soot from the coal furnaces or boilers. To "fix" the discoloration, people painted the bricks (usually red). Later the paint was removed or the soot sand blasted off to return to the original colours.
 
At one time, some office workers worked on their feet and handled "punched cards." --------remember those?
Today most will be seated in front of computer screens.

Canada Life office workers, 1945 Ontario Archives
Canada Life office workers 1945 Ont. Arch.jpg
 

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Richmond Street West at Brant in the late 1950's/early 1960's. The City's 1932 Waterworks Building to the right:

s0372_ss0100_it0737.jpg


Looking north at the Waterworks Building from Adelaide and Maud:

s0372_ss0100_it0738.jpg
 

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Thanks for the "auto"-dating guys.

Here are some pics of the Waterworks Building (505 Richmond Street West) under construction in 1932. A glimpse into Depression-era Toronto. The Waterworks Building was a make-work project at the time, on the site of the then recently demolished St. Andrew's Market.

View looking NE from Maud, showing buildings on the north side of Richmond at Augusta:

505historic.jpg


Looking east toward Spadina, showing St. Andrew's Playground to the right:

505historic2.jpg


Looking west towards Bathurst, showing the steeple of St. Mary's:

505historic3.jpg


Looking south to Adelaide:

505historic4.jpg


Looking SW:

505historic5.jpg
 

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I find the endurance of a street name like "Maud" intriguing--it's like the kind of street you'd expect to be renamed, or redeveloped, or subsumed over time...
 

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