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.
















Man standing on concrete wall.Photo credit
The Pantheon in Rome and Hong Kong at sunrise.Photo credit
Windmills and green grass.
Time lapse of blue skies over a solar field. 
A Shiba Inu smiles at the cameraCanva
A Japanese sunfish swims in a an aquariumCanva

A fast food employee hands over a bag of food to a drive-thru customerCanva
Gif of Ronald McDonald losing his hat via
A fancy turkey dinnerCanva

Jeff Bridges at Comic Con.Photo by Gage Skidmore via