New photographs have been to the centenary of the end of the First World War on November 11, 1918. The UK's Press Association the selection of 100 images from a century ago. They originally fading black and white images but have been painstakingly and recreated. They provide us with a clearer idea of what during and after the War, which nine million people. The photographs wounded soldiers, prisoners of war, fighting in the trenches, and scenes in London after the day the Armistice was to end the War. One shows a soldier a haircut in a makeshift mountain barbershop on the Albanian front.
A UK-based photo colouriser the coloured photos. Tom Marshall reporters he wanted to do something special to the 100-year anniversary of World War 1, which at the time called "the war to end all wars". Mr Marshall said: "I colourising black and white photos professionally in 2014, coinciding with the centenary of the outbreak of WW1 in 1914....To mark the centenary of the end of the First World War, I decided to 100 images I've colourised in tribute to the men and women who through the war, and those who their lives." He added: "I men and women of several nationalities, races and religions, as the entire world was by the war."