Here Are 30+ Photos From the Past Compared to Today

    In recent years, overlay photos have become all the rage. Several artists have made a living by holding up old black-and-white photos of yesteryear against modern surroundings to highlight whatโ€™s changed and whatโ€™s remained the same. Today, we travel back in time across the United States and Europe to visit world-famous landmarks and meet famous actors, philosophers, and rock nโ€™ roll stars.

    Bob Dylan, Central Park

    Hereโ€™s photographer and artist Nick Sulivan holding up a photo of legendary American singer-songwriter Bob Dylan ambling along the tree-lined sidewalk on Fifth Avenue to the west of New York Cityโ€™s Central Park. As you can see, his hair is โ€œblowinโ€™ in the windโ€ as he takes โ€œshelter from the storm before a โ€œhurricane.โ€

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    Bob Dylan, Central Park

    Bob famously sang, โ€œThe times, they are a-changin’โ€ but Central Park looks pretty much the same now as it did when photographer Richard Avedon snapped him in 1965 walking along โ€œjust like a rolling stoneโ€ฆโ€

    The Rolling Stones, London

    Hereโ€™s The Rolling Stones wandering through Covent Garden in London in 1964. Theyโ€™re on their way to play a gig at the Donmar Warehouse at the heart of the famous Seven Dials, a famous intersection where seven roads intersect.

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    The Rolling Stones, London

    In the 60 years since Terry Oโ€™Neill took this photo, the only changes are some new trees and some scaffolding. But, the Donmar Warehouse has changed multiple times. Before The Beatles and The Stones played there, it used to be a banana-ripening warehouse.

    Cool Cats, New York

    This photograph of two cool cats was taken on the corner of New Yorkโ€™s 42nd and Madison in 1961. The photographer was American street photographer Garry Winogrand, who was famous for portraying everyday life and mid-20th-century social issues. These two members of the beat generation stand out from the rat race like time travelers!

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    Cool Cats, New York

    While you wouldnโ€™t wear an evening dress and pearls to go shopping nowadays โ€” because youโ€™d likely get robbed โ€” the midtown Manhattan buildings havenโ€™t changed at all.

    Chinatown, New York

    The monochrome picture in this overlay was taken in 1900. It shows Chinese men and a woman delivering a tray of tea, standing on the corner of Pell and Doyes Streets in New Yorkโ€™s bustling Chinatown.

    ?url=https%3A%2F%2Fd2zw9f2dp6ompi.cloudfront.net%2Fwp content%2Fuploads%2F2023%2F08%2F02170737%2F18 Pell Street in 1900
    Chinatown, New York

    In case you donโ€™t know the Big Apple, Pell Street is a stoneโ€™s throw away from Brooklyn Bridge. Nowadays, Chinatown is still full of restaurants, tea shops, and diners selling delicious Dim Sum. A hair salon called Kellyโ€™s sits underneath the red-bricked building.

    Le Tabou, Paris

    This photo from the late 1940s shows a gang of trendy existentialists philosophizing whether a checkered car was a good purchase. Le Tabou was a late-license cellar club located at 33 Rue Dauphine in Saint-Germain-des-Prรฉs, Paris. The club opened in April 1947 and soon became a hangout for writers and deep thinkers like Jean-Paul Sartre and Albert Camus.

    ?url=https%3A%2F%2Fd2zw9f2dp6ompi.cloudfront.net%2Fwp content%2Fuploads%2F2023%2F08%2F02170824%2FLe Tabou late 1940s
    Le Tabou, Paris

    Poets like Tousky, Camille Bryen, and de Beaumont, and artists like Desseau and Wols also flocked there in checkered clown cars. Today, Le Tabou is called Cafe Laurent and is part of Hรดtel dโ€™Aubusson.

    14th Street, Washington D.C.

    Welcome to H.D. Leary Jr.โ€™s Hudson Motor Car Company showroom. Find us at 1317ยฝ 14th Street, Washington D.C., between The Star Laundry and Aunt Bessieโ€™s Royal Victorian Waffle Stop. We sell the finest automobiles in the land.

    ?url=https%3A%2F%2Fd2zw9f2dp6ompi.cloudfront.net%2Fwp content%2Fuploads%2F2023%2F08%2F02170740%2F1317%25C2%25BD 14TH STREET WASHINGTON DC
    14th Street, Washington D.C.

    Test drive the new 1910 Hudson Model 20 Roadster. The top speed is 10 mph and recommended retail price is 99 cents. Nowadays, the site of H.D. Leary Jr.โ€™s car showroom sits next door to a menโ€™s LGBTQ+ sauna.

    An American Girl in Italy

    This famous photo was taken by American photographer and photojournalist Ruth Orkin. She took the iconic snap outside Caffe Gilli on Via Roma in Florence, Italy. The picture is called An American Girl in Italy and shows a young woman from the USA walking center frame while Italian men of all ages ogle at her.

    ?url=https%3A%2F%2Fd2zw9f2dp6ompi.cloudfront.net%2Fwp content%2Fuploads%2F2023%2F08%2F02170842%2FOutside Caffe Gilli in Florence Italy by Ruth Orkin
    An American Girl in Italy

    As you can see, Via Roma has barely changed at all. In fact, itโ€™s not changed much since the cityโ€™s oldest cafรฉ, Caffe Gilli, opened in 1733 in Medici-era Florence.

    Liz Taylor and Richard Burton, Florence

    The paparazzi are a pain. Still, one paparazzo perfectly captured Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton outside The Excelsior Hotel on Lungarno Amerigo Vespucci in Florence. Taken in the 1960s, the famous pair of actors had a legendary rollercoaster relationship, marrying and divorcing twice!

    ?url=https%3A%2F%2Fd2zw9f2dp6ompi.cloudfront.net%2Fwp content%2Fuploads%2F2023%2F08%2F02170922%2FTaylor and Burton outside the Excelsior Hotel Lungarno Amerigo Vespucci Florence 1960s
    Liz Taylor and Richard Burton, Florence

    Today, the hotel has changed its name to the Westin Excelsior. The hotel and church Chiesa di San Salvatore in Ognissanti look exactly the same.

    The Beatles, London

    Hereโ€™s a great photo of John, Paul, George, and Ringo โ€” aka The Fab Four โ€” in Rupert Court, London. While Carnaby Street was the center of the Swinging Sixties, Londonโ€™s Soho district was seedier, full of adult bookstores and clubs.

    ?url=https%3A%2F%2Fd2zw9f2dp6ompi.cloudfront.net%2Fwp content%2Fuploads%2F2023%2F08%2F02170924%2FThe Beatles on Rupert Court in London
    The Beatles, London

    Nowadays, the areaโ€™s been gentrified, but Edgar Wrightโ€™s One Night in Soho shows the seedy side alleys are still haunted by a cool 1960s vibeโ€ฆ amongst all the Starbucks and Pret A Manger sandwich shops!

    Beauty Pageant, Washington D.C.

    Check out this bevy of beauties hanging out after winning a beauty pageant at Union Station, Washington D.C. Left to right, the ladies are Ethel Charles โ€” who was crowned Miss Atlantic City โ€” and Miss Philadelphiaโ€™s Nellie Orr.

    ?url=https%3A%2F%2Fd2zw9f2dp6ompi.cloudfront.net%2Fwp content%2Fuploads%2F2023%2F08%2F02170744%2FBEAUTY PAGEANT WINNERS UNION STATION WASHINGTON DC
    Beauty Pageant, Washington D.C.

    On the right is Margaret Gorman, who was not only Miss Washington, D.C. โ€” but also the winner of the 1921 Inter-City Beauty Contest and the first Miss America. As for you, well, youโ€™ve won second prize in a beauty contest! Collect $10.

    Cary Grant and Audrey Hepburn, Rome

    This overlay shows Cary Grant and Audrey Hepburn walking down the Spanish Steps in Rome on their Roman Holiday. But, one guy whoโ€™s not enjoying his Roman Holiday is the guy in the blue. At the top, standing in the Piazza Trinitร  dei Monti, you can see that the Trinitร  dei Monti church is still standing.

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    Cary Grant and Audrey Hepburn, Rome

    But, the weather isnโ€™t very good. Maybe thatโ€™s why Mr. Blue looks so grumpy. Still, it could have been worse. In July 2023, Rome recorded its hottest-ever day of 107 ยฐF.

    Lincoln Memorial, Washington D.C.

    Here, photographer Jason Powell is standing under the statue of Abe, looking along the National Mall. The Neoclassical Lincoln Memorial opened in 1922 and drew huge crowds. But, not as big as the March on Washington on August 28th, 1963.

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    Lincoln Memorial, Washington D.C.

    On that date, a quarter of a million people marched to hear Martin Luther King Jr. make his famous โ€œI Have a Dreamโ€ speech in which he called for an end to racism. 50 years later, Captain America would run past Falcon on this spot, saying, โ€œOn your left.โ€

    Muhammad Ali, London

    While that might look like the Arc de Triomphe in Paris, itโ€™s actually the much smaller Marble Arch in London. And that fine fellow is Muhammad Ali, about to float like a butterfly and sting like a beeโ€ฆ unless he was preparing to fight English boxer Henry Cooper, who knocked him down.

    ?url=https%3A%2F%2Fd2zw9f2dp6ompi.cloudfront.net%2Fwp content%2Fuploads%2F2023%2F08%2F02170838%2FMuammed Ali Marble Arch
    Muhammad Ali, London

    Today, the Marble Arch still sits at the west end of Oxford Street, near the northeast corner of Hyde Park at the intersection with the famous Park Lane. But, you canโ€™t go jogging there now without getting hit by a red double-decker bus!

    Pablo Picasso, Paris

    This great photo shows Spanish artist Pablo Picasso standing on Rue Ravignan in the Montmartre section of Paris in 1905. Picasso moved to the French capital the previous year and settled in the nearby artist quarter Bateau-Lavoir or โ€œWashhouse Boatโ€ in the 18th Arrondissement.

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    Pablo Picasso, Paris

    He definitely would have gone to see high-kicking cancan-dancing showgirls at the nearby Moulin Rouge. The angle of the overlay is a bit off-kilter, but the buildings and trees are the same now as they were 120 years ago.

    Leesburg, Virginia

    This photo from 1920 shows a man proudly showing off his Sayers Six automobile in front of the Loudoun County Courthouse in Leesburg, Virginia. The hand thatโ€™s holding the black-and-white photo up against the backdrop belongs to photographer Jason Powell.

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    Leesburg, Virginia

    He tends to find old-timey images in the Library of Congress, then scours the length and breadth of the country, looking for the exact spot they were taken. Next, Jason spends ages lining them up for the perfect then-and-now photo for a glimpse into the past. Itโ€™s almost like seeing ghosts!

    Queen Street, Jamaica

    This excellent old-timey color photo comes from Queen Street in Jamaica. Though color film was available at the time, the photo looks like itโ€™s simply been colorized. It was taken in 1930 and shows two fellas resting on their bicycles, probably taking a breather from the stifling Caribbean heat.

    ?url=https%3A%2F%2Fd2zw9f2dp6ompi.cloudfront.net%2Fwp content%2Fuploads%2F2023%2F08%2F02170854%2FQueen Street Bermuda 1930s
    Queen Street, Jamaica

    While the buildings look much the same, the main thing thatโ€™s changed is the mode of transport. Back then, everyone got around on bikes, while today, they use cars and minivans. The Gibbons Company building is still thereโ€ฆ presumably still selling gibbons.

    Cary Grant, Claridgeโ€™s Hotel, London

    This great photo shows Hollywood actor Cary Grant leaving the posh Claridgeโ€™s Hotel in Londonโ€™s Mayfair in 1946. That year, he appeared in Alfred Hitchcockโ€™s Notorious. Grant was no stranger to the other side of the pond. He was born Archibald Leach in Horfield, Bristol in 1904.

    ?url=https%3A%2F%2Fd2zw9f2dp6ompi.cloudfront.net%2Fwp content%2Fuploads%2F2023%2F08%2F02170756%2FCary Grant Claridges
    Cary Grant, Claridgeโ€™s Hotel, London

    If youโ€™ve heard the name before, John Cleeseโ€™s character was named Archie Leach in A Fish Called Wanda. Today, Claridgeโ€™s looks much the same and is just as posh. It still accommodates famous Hollywood stars, and Gordon Ramsey used to have a restaurant there.

    Annapolis, Maryland

    Another of Jason Powellโ€™s shots is the William Paca House and Garden in Annapolis, Maryland. The building is an 18th-century Georgian mansion built between 1763 and 1765. William Paca was a three-term Governor of Maryland and a Founding Father who signed the Declaration of Independence.

    ?url=https%3A%2F%2Fd2zw9f2dp6ompi.cloudfront.net%2Fwp content%2Fuploads%2F2023%2F08%2F02170753%2FCARVEL HALL ANNAPOLIS MD
    Annapolis, Maryland

    If you want to know where he signed it, the answer isโ€ฆ at the bottom. 155 years after he built the house, this automobile parked outside in 1920. Then, 100 years later, Jason showed us how tiny old cars used to be!