Genealogical Support Services for other Professionals

Call me to help with your next big project

  • scanning / photo editing
  • collection management
  • image searches
  • graphic design/art direction
  • book/report formatting and editing
  • narrative writing, editing and design
  • supplemental research
  • record transcriptions
  • data and citation clean up
  • tree data input

Vintage Photo Styles

I will transform your photo to reflect the chosen era and style, from mid-1800s Tintypes to Kodak Brownies of the 1920s. Upgrade to the Time Tripper package for wardrobe changes, background and scenes. I can also merge several people into one in my Family Reunion package.

My Vintage Photo Editing Process

Just Like You, every makeover is unique and takes on a life of its own, so results may differ from the examples shown. Your image will have its own special magic, and I might suggest a style that works better with your photo’s lighting, background and color variations to bring out your individual charm and personality.

I don’t just edit photos, I transform them into distinctive vintage portraits that echo the spirit of a bygone era. Don’t want to look like you’ve just stepped out of a time machine into a 19th-century Arizona mining town? I blend artistic skill and cutting-edge technology using authentic historic images and custom a.i. to seamlessly transport you back in time. Whether it’s a bustling 19th-century street scene or a cherished place with your ancestors, I craft each portrait to be a timeless family heirloom.

Choose from a variety of custom editing options for a one-of-a-kind portrait. Each photo is infused with its own special magic, ensuring your image is enhanced with the perfect vintage style that complements your individual charm. Final images are available as digital downloads and prints. Custom framing also available.

My Signature Styles

Custom Editing Options – can be applied to any style: border/no border, aged, grungy, bright, dark and moody, soft vignette, hard oval cut out, etc.

Classic Elegance

Faded Auburn Glow

Dreamy Daguerrotype

Gilded Victorian

Watercolor Whispers

Tarnished Tintype

Whiskey Barrel Brown

Kodak Brownie Days

Yesterday’s You Photo Package

 Glimpse your past self

$30

I will transform your photo to reflect the chosen era and style, from mid-1800s Tintypes to Kodak Brownies of the 1920s.

Upgrade to the Time Tripper package for wardrobe changes, background and scenes.

Add figures from another photo with my Family Reunion package.

Send me your photos
for a custom vintage transformation!

Time Tripper Photo Package

Take a day trip to the past!

$45

Imagine yourself as a gold prospector in the Arizona Territory in 1863.

How about as a flapper in the Roaring Twenties?

Just tell me where and when you want to go and who you envision yourself to be in that era, I’ll design the perfect historical setting and wardrobe for your transformation, ensuring every detail is period-appropriate to avoid anachronisms.

Send me your photos
for a custom vintage transformation!

Rewind Time Photo Restoration

Turn back the clock on your damaged or faded photos

I will lovingly restore your cherished memories, erasing the marks of time to revive their original splendor. I do all work. I do not farm this out overseas.

Starting at $55

Upload your photo for a free evaluation

Print Scanning Options

Do it yourself at home or at a local copy shop and then send the high-res file. Please request my Scanning Instructions for the best quality possible.

For the absolute best results, let me scan it.  Local pickup or order my ship kit that includes a waterproof rigid mailer and roundtrip postage with tracking.

Ask about slide and negative scanning services.

My digital restoration process:

  • Erase the marks of time: Remove scratches and cracks, restoring your photos to their original brilliance.
  • Bring back vibrant details: Reverse fading, enhance color, reduce noise and bring details back into focus for a clear and crisp image.
  • Mend precious moments: Repair minor tears, reconstruct missing sections, and breathe new life into damaged photos.
  • Unwanted distractions vanish: Eliminate dust spots, writing, marks and blemishes for an unobstructed view.
  • I do not overprocess it. I believe it should still look real and true to the original.

High-resolution scanning, prints, and framing are available to showcase your finished masterpiece.

 
 

Uncle Jim Thornton and his daughters Olivia and Fannie

In May 2024 I was contacted on Ancestry by Kate Kelley, aka “The Photo Angel” as seen on NBC’s The TODAY Show

I acquired an antique portrait of a father and his daughters that I would love to return to a family member! Names include Uncle Jim Thornton, Olivia, and Fannie. The back mentions that Olivia married a man by the last name Burns. Are you a blood relative of the Thorntons and if so, what is the relationship?

I responded:

That is so weird. I was just working on this exact line this morning. I am related to these people, but very distantly. My brother’s ydna test ties me to the father of a woman (Aimee) whose line of Thorntons were in Tennessee. That line is connected to the Thorntons in your photo in Alabama. My Thornton branch went into Virginia and we have been trying to document the link between the three lines. According to my tree, “Uncle Jim” Thornton would be James Clark Thornton, born 1842 in Stevenson, Alabama. His daughter Olivia was born 1876 and Fannie (Mary Francis) was born 1877. Olivia married Jasper Clark Burns in 1896 in Texas and they had at least 3 kids. Jim’s father was Joseph Thornton, born 1805. I would love to get a good scan of the photo for my own use, but I’m probably not the right person to give the real photo to if an actual descendant can be found. I would be pleased to assist you in tracking down some of the descendants – I enjoy doing that every so often when I find a photo on ebay.

I immediately started researching Uncle Jim and his daughters and decided to use this as a test case for my new “A Picture and 1000 Words” service. Having just filled in some records I didn’t have a lot to do before I could start working on a story about the people in the photo. The hardest part for me is to STOP researching, and I went over 1000 words a little. I just love finding out all the little details and connections.

Uncle Jim Thornton and his daughters Olivia and Fannie. Photo ca 1890, Robertson County, Texas

James “Jim” Clark Thornton was born June 17, 1842, in Stevenson, Alabama, the youngest of eight children of Joseph Thornton and Mary Polly Henry, the great granddaughter of the American patriot Patrick Henry. He grew up on his parents’ farm in Jackson County on the Tennessee border.

Lincoln’s election in 1860 triggered mounting tensions resulting in the secession of the Southern states starting with South Carolina on Dec. 20, 1860. Alabama quickly followed 3 weeks later as the 4th.

In February 1861, the newly elected President of the Confederacy, Jefferson Davis, visited Stevenson, a momentous event for the small hamlet, and reportedly gave a defiant speech: He was saluted with gun and fireworks and the houses were illuminated. In his speech he said “You Border States will gladly come into the Southern Confederacy within sixty days as we will be your only friends. England will recognize us and a glorious future is before us.” Republican Banner, Nashville, Tennessee, Feb 16, 1861. Two months later they began organizing a volunteer army.

Soon after, two of Jim’s brothers answered Jeff Davis’ call in late 1861. George and William mustered into Co. C of the 49th Alabama Infantry under General John Breckenridge who had been Douglas’ running mate against Lincoln. On April 6, the 49th took part in the Battle of Shiloh with 113 killed or wounded of the 24,000 total casualties.

Jim followed dutifully in April, and at the age of just 19, he joined his brothers in Company C as sergeant. One month later, they helped defend Vicksburg, suffering nearly 400 casualties.

A plan to retake Baton Rouge sent what was left of the 49th, now less than 100 men, to Louisiana. In the heat of the summer, they boarded trains to Camp Moore near Kentwood, Louisiana and joined 5000 men for the assault on Baton Rouge. The battle raged for six hours before Breckinridge realized it would cost too many men to take the city and he withdrew. 45 in Jim’s Company were killed or wounded. Also among the Southern dead – Alexander H. Todd, President Lincoln’s brother-in-law.

The 4th brother Joseph enlisted in Tennessee in late ‘62 and was assigned to the Niter and Mining Corps supplying the Confederacy with minerals and metals.

Meanwhile Jim, George and William saw more action at Corinth, Mississippi in October.  After two days of hand-to-hand combat, they were again forced to retreat and again suffered severe losses.

In May 1863, the 49th moved to Port Hudson, Louisiana, a crucial position on the Mississippi River as one of the last crossings besides Vicksburg open to the Confederates. Despite its strategic advantage on a bluff on a hairpin turn in the river, 6,800 Confederate troops were no match for the gunboats and 30,000 Union soldiers. The siege dragged on for over a month and with practically all of their food supplies and ammunition exhausted, the Rebels resorted to eating their mules and rats. Finally, when Confederate Maj. Gen. Gardner learned that Vicksburg had fallen on July 4, he realized his situation was hopeless, and on July 9, he surrendered, ending 48 days of continuous fighting and giving the Union control of the Mississippi river.

Under the terms of surrender, the enlisted men were paroled and the officers were loaded onboard a steamer and sent to prison. Jim was among those paroled and sent home until the end of the war. But many from his regiment, including his two brothers, were sent back into battle, going on to the Siege of Atlanta in 1864 to defend against Sherman’s onslaught, and by war’s end in 1865, the 49th was reduced to a mere 50 men.

When Jim returned to Stevenson, he found his hometown had become a Union stronghold while he had been away fighting in vain to keep the Union from taking control of the Mississippi River. Stevenson was located at the junction of two major railroads and had been captured shortly after he had left in April 1862. They ransacked the county for supplies and livestock and constructed a fort with 14-foot walls and cannon platforms atop a hill overlooking the town and railroads to prevent the Rebels from moving supplies and troops through the area. They also established a hospital and a refugee camp in town.

While his brothers continued the fight, with George captured in 1865, Jim lived under the shadow of Union military rule, helping protect and care for his parents and sisters. When their town was finally released from the grip of the North at the end of the war, his brothers returned and they were left to pick up the pieces and find a new normal. In 1867 all four brothers registered to vote in Jackson County on May 1 alongside blacks in their community.

Jim’s father died in 1869, and the 1870 census found Jim still living with his widowed mother and sisters Martha, Nancy and widowed sister Malinda and her daughter Jane on the family farm in Fackler just south of Stevenson.

Five years later, at the age of 32, Jim married Rachael Ann Jennings, age 20, in June 1875. The couple may have met each other through his Thornton cousins in Marion County, Tennessee [adjacent to the north] where Rachel had lived in 1870.

Jim and Rachel had two daughters, Olivia, born in 1876 in Stevenson, and Fannie, born April 13, 1877. Two months later, Rachael died at the age of 22. Most widowers with young children usually remarried immediately, but Jim chose not to, devoting himself to raising his daughters with the help of his family, especially his spinster sister Martha, who moved in to care for him and the children.

Around 1882 Jim and his daughters moved to Robertson County, Texas, likely following after his late wife’s parents who had settled there a few years earlier during a wave of immigration out of the Old South attracted by fertile and relatively inexpensive land. Several of Jim’s siblings and extended family also moved to Robertson County, a Democratic stronghold during the Jim Crow era. He and his daughters farmed 125 acres in the Bald Prairie community.

Fannie never married. Olivia married Jasper Burns in 1896. They had three children: Basil, Jewel, and Francis, named after her sister.

Towards the end of his life, Jim suffered from asthma, heart trouble, and senility. He died at Olivia’s home in Franklin, Robertson County in 1928 at the age of 85.

Olivia died in 1953 at the age of 77. Fannie died in 1972 at the age of 94.

[Editor’s note: Robertson County is just north of Brazos County where my alma mater Texas A&M University is located and where one of my ancestors John Wagner moved to after the Civil War. His wife Lucy Millican lived in Robertson County in the early 1900s.]

[Geographic note: Just north of Robertson County is a tiny town called Thornton in Limestone County, which may be connected to Jim’s family somehow.]


If you’d like to have a photo researched, please check out my
Meet Your Ancestors Photo Research Package.

 

Time Travel Portraits

GLIMPSE YOUR PAST SELF

Step Back in Time
with my
Vintage Photo Makeovers!

Time Travel Photo and Tour Packages

Journey into the past with my unique services that artfully blend vintage photo editing, genealogy, and historical research with creative storytelling. Transform your everyday photos into windows to yesteryear and meet the ancestors who shaped your story.

Are you ready to embark?

Whether you’re seeking a touch of whimsical vintage flair or a deep dive into your family’s legacy, I can create a unique and cherished piece of your personal history.

Choose Your Adventure

No post found


You might also be interested in: Meet Your Ancestors Photo Research Package

 


 

Announcing Time Travel Adventures & Genealogy Research Services

Your Guide:
Diana Thornton
Genealogist & Time Traveler

I am excited to announce that I am returning to my “roots” by offering PROFESSIONAL GENEALOGY RESEARCH SERVICES.

I started doing genealogy when I was 9 years old (half a century ago!) when my grandmother showed me some old photos and a family tree. I was hooked. I became my family’s historian and archivist, and went on to attain a Master’s degree in Archaeology.

I love witnessing history through the eyes of my ancestors by unearthing their stories. It’s the same feeling I would get when I found an artifact, knowing I was the first person to touch that object in hundreds of years. When I’m researching, I’m transported back in time. I go so deep down the rabbit hole that a ringing phone is often my only trigger back to the Here-Now.

When the pandemic shut down my business in the music industry, I began seeking a new career. Because I have a lot of skills and can do many things that I love, including my latest project, O Muse! Magazine, I’ve been resisting focusing on one specialty.

So it feels natural to turn to genealogy, my first and most enduring passion, which draws on my experience in photography, publications, graphic design, writing, and even my Master’s degree, to make a living doing what I call time travel.

Every adventure begins with curiosity, a desire to understand, to learn something new, to challenge your beliefs and get to know yourself through your past. It only takes one question to start: If you could go back in time and meet your ancestors, who would you like to meet and what would you ask them?

Everyone’s journey is different. For some, traveling back in time is like climbing a mountain or driving across country on the back roads. Or it could be as simple as seeing your grandfather in your son’s face. For others, it’s like going home by walking on the ground your great great grandfather plowed or sitting in your grandmother’s kitchen.

The quest is also about finding connections and learning about history and other cultures in a way no history book can offer. You’ll meet past and present-day cousins you never knew you had from all corners of the globe.

Whether you’ve been time travelling for years or you’re a novice, I want to lead you on an unforgettable adventure that goes beyond names and dates. Real-life experiences and surprising details about your ancestors are what make the stories you will tell for generations to come.

No matter who or what you seek – the answer to a long-held family secret, the truth about your biological roots, the name of your first immigrant ancestor, or what happened to great uncle Charlie – and however tangled a vine your lineage is, your personal journey through time starts now.

Call 504-312-2354 today for a free consultation.


Time Travel Disclosures and Fine Print:

Unlimited luggage and extra passengers welcome, so invite your children, parents, and grandparents to come along and share the adventure with you.

WARNING: Detours are common and assumptions are often wrong. There is no guarantee that you will end up where you think you’re going or that you will return the same person. Be prepared to encounter unexpected and heartbreaking stories about your family. Intimate discoveries are treated with the utmost discretion.

NOTICE: This mode of spacetime travel requires no vaccinations and is FTA-certified paradox-safe in that it cannot alter the past. However, it will change your knowledge, understanding and perspective of the past, thereby, in effect, changing your past, and has the potential to change the future. Travel at your own risk of learning something extraordinary.

Why are you still reading this? Call me today to plan your adventure.