Of the 145,000 photographs made by photographers employed by the Farm Security Administration (FSA) in the 1930s and 1940s, relatively few were reproduced widely and most of those iconic documentary images frame the Depression in black-and-white images of dispossessed rural people. Still, close to 2,000 frames were shot with the relatively new technology: 4 by 5 Kodachrome slide film.
And as the very last rolls of Kodachrome are being developed this month at Dwayne's Photo Parsons, Kansas, it’s worth looking at these images again—as a colorful a visual record of small-town life and everyday existence. They're a compelling portrait of what America ate and make a great companion to Mark Kurlansky's The Food of a Younger Land.
All the images are property of the Library of Congress and can be found in Bound for Glory: America in Color.















Security cam footageCanva
Gif that reads "We've got your back" via
Salesman at car dealership speaks to a woman in a carCanva
Hands held up to the sky make a 'heart' signCanva

Take a deep breath.Image from
A animated version of box breathing.
Navy SEALs strain under the weight of their boat.Rennett Stowe
Family laughing and playing together.Image from 


Representative Image: He'd rather be home, but he has to provide. 
Hand signs an invoiceCanva
Gif of Colin Ferrel via
A woman hands her neighbors a giftCanva