Needs review

Unidentified Person 515 is not currently tagged on this photo.

You reached this photo from that person's gallery, but no current face assignment matches them here. Review before trusting this link.

Historical photograph from Jews of Rhodes: Family Memories & Heritage
Needs review
Rachel Capouya Capuano
c. 1950s · 1/2 identified · Jews of Rhodes: Family Memories & Heritage
IdentifiedUnidentified
Photo 99 of 133
DownloadFamily TreeSee on Map

Jews of Rhodes: Family Memories & Heritage · Facebook

2 people detected · 1 identified

c. 1950s ± 3 yearsmedium confidence

AI Analysis

Estimated by AI — help us verify

Date Estimate — AI Estimated

circa 1952

Confidence: mediumRange: 1950–1955
AI Reasoning — AI Estimated

The subject (born 1932) appears to be in her late teens or early twenties. The signature uses her maiden name, suggesting a pre-marriage official document. Combined with the culturally lagged 1940s styling, the early 1950s is the most probable timeframe.

Location Estimate — AI Estimated

Los Angeles, California, United States

Confidence: high

Los Angeles, California

Scene — AI Estimated

A formal head-and-shoulders studio portrait of a woman in her mid-30s.

Tags — AI Estimated
Photo Detective Evidence — AI Estimated

Photo Detective Analysis

Print/Physical

Stark white background with the subject's signature across the bottom, highly characteristic of mid-20th century passport, visa, or naturalization photographs.

strong (1945-1960)

Fashion/Grooming

Thin, highly arched eyebrows, dark lipstick, and sculpted hair waves (pin curls/marcel style).

strong (1935-1945)

Dark V-neck garment with decorative dress clips or appliques at the collarbone, popular in the late 1930s and 1940s.

moderate (1935-1948)

Environment

Blank, high-contrast studio or official backdrop.

weak (1940-1960)

Technology

High-contrast black and white photography typical of official document reproduction.

weak (1940-1960)

Do you recognize someone?

Help us identify the people in this photograph. Your family knowledge could be the key to preserving our shared history.