What We Loved This Week, Jul. 3 – 9

Published July 8, 2016
Updated July 7, 2016

Vintage 1970s New York City photos, China’s massive mosquito breeding project, inside the Steinway piano factory, Ramadan 2016 in photos, and the best ATI photography.

1970s New York

Vintage Everyday

English Photographer Captures Life In New York City In The 1970s

1970s New York 2

Vintage Everyday

Forty years ago, you wouldn’t find a sliver of the New York City that over 8 million people live in today. In the 1970s, today’s gentrified metropolis was nowhere to be found. Instead, there were seedy, drug-infested neighborhoods and a climbing crime rate.

One Brooklyn-based English photographer, Eugene Gannon, captured the city during this time through these color photographs. They reveal that despite the city’s decline, life went on for its inhabitants.

View more at Vintage Everyday.

1970s New York 3

Vintage Everyday

China’s Massive Mosquito Breeding Project In Full Swing

Mosquito Container

Kevin Frayer / Getty Images via The AtlanticChinese Phd student and researcher Zhang Dongjing displays a container of sterile adult male mosquitos that are ready to be released in a lab in the Mass Production Facility at the Sun Yat-Sen University-Michigan State University Joint Center of Vector Control for Tropical Disease on June 20, 2016 in Guangzhou, China.

Your first question is surely “Why?”

Why would anyone want to purposefully breed mosquitoes, the scourge of humanity for centuries? Well, it’s because, as the saying goes, the enemy of your enemy is your friend.

Right now, one of humankind’s great enemies is the Zika virus. And the mosquitoes being born by the hundreds of millions at this Chinese factory, the largest of its kind in the world, are fighting back against Zika (not to mention Dengue).

Infected with a bacterium that prevents the fertilization of eggs, these factory-made male mosquitoes are being released into the wild, where they’ll mate with wild females whose offspring will never be born because of that bacterium.

See more at The Atlantic.

Mosquito Microscope

Kevin Frayer / Getty Images via The AtlanticAdult female mosquitos are seen under a microscope at the Sun Yat-Sen University-Michigan State University Joint Center of Vector Control for Tropical Disease, on June 21, 2016, in Guangzhou, China.

Mosquito Containers

Kevin Frayer / Getty Images via The AtlanticA lab technician holds plastic containers of sterile adult male mosquitos that are ready to be released in the Mass Production Facility at the Sun Yat-Sen University-Michigan State University Joint Center of Vector Control for Tropical Disease, on June 20, 2016, in Guangzhou, China.

Making Art: Inside The Steinway & Sons Piano Factory

Steinway

Christopher Payne/Slate

Playing the piano is an art — and so is making one. Tucked away in Astoria, Queens is Steinway & Sons, a site responsible for some of the world’s most stunning, life-affirming melodies’ very existence.

Indeed, the Queens warehouse makes pianos, and some of the world’s finest. In order to document the magic made from woods, string, and sweat, photographer Christopher Payne visited the factory over 50 times. His findings, photographical insights into the science and artistry that goes into the production of one of the world’s finest instruments, compose a book called Making Steinway.

View more at Slate.

Steinway

Christopher Payne/Slate

Steinway

Christopher Payne/Slate

author
All That's Interesting
author
Established in 2010, All That's Interesting brings together a dedicated staff of digital publishing veterans and subject-level experts in history, true crime, and science. From the lesser-known byways of human history to the uncharted corners of the world, we seek out stories that bring our past, present, and future to life. Privately-owned since its founding, All That's Interesting maintains a commitment to unbiased reporting while taking great care in fact-checking and research to ensure that we meet the highest standards of accuracy.
editor
John Kuroski
editor
John Kuroski is the editorial director of All That's Interesting. He graduated from New York University with a degree in history, earning a place in the Phi Alpha Theta honor society for history students. An editor at All That's Interesting since 2015, his areas of interest include modern history and true crime.