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  • 2019-03-22 (xsd:date)
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  • Was This Photograph of an 'Explosion' of Buttons Taken at an Abandoned Button Factory? (en)
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  • A photograph supposedly showing millions of colorful buttons littering a dilapidated staircase has been circulating on social media for several years, attached to the claim that the image was taken inside an abandoned button factory: Many internet users have expressed skepticism over the claim. In a September 2018 thread on Reddit, for example, one user imagined the supposedly ridiculous series of events that would have resulted in such a scene: While we can't confirm exactly how these buttons came to be on this staircase (or even how many there are), we can confirm that this photograph was actually taken at an abandoned button factory by Instagram user Dec_Des and was originally shared to her feed in November 2016: We reached out to Dec_Des, a photographer who specializes in abandoned urban buildings, for more information, and she told us that the image showed a staircase at an abandoned button factory in Athens, Greece. Dec_Des also said that the photograph wasn't staged, and that the buttons were all over the top floor in plastic bags decayed and opened with that result and all over the stairs. The humorously suggested scenario by the Redditor above is likely inaccurate. -- that is, employees did not spill buttons all over the floor on the day that this factory was shut down. However, it's easy to imagine someone's ripping open the abandoned bags of buttons and dumping them over the stairs as urban explorers made their way into the graffiti-covered building in the years since the factory closed. Dec_Des provided us with additional images she took in this abandoned factory: Dec_Des isn't the only person who has explored this abandoned building. In October 2018, after this photograph went viral attached to an inaccurate claim that it was taken in China, a photographer named Christos Tolis set out to locate and photograph this picturesque staircase and found it inside an abandoned button factory in Patissia, a neighborhood in Athens, Greece. Here's an excerpt from an article published by mixanitouxronou.gr (translated via Google and edited for clarity): Mixanitouxronou.gr, which published a number of Tolis' photographs, explained that this building was once owned by a company called Niva. In addition to capturing his own version of the viral button-covered staircase photo, Tolis also took images of the abandoned equipment, old store signs, graffiti, discarded button boxes, and a tower adorned with three black stars outside of the building. We were able to match Tolis' photographs of the exterior of this building with images from Google Earth and Google Maps. You can see Tolis' images on Mixanitouxronou.gr. Here's an excerpt from the article describing the condition of this abandoned building: It's unclear exactly when this factory was shut down. Mixanitouxronou.gr reported that Niva started manufacturing buttons in the 1940s, and that buttons produced by this company were placed on the clothes of half of Greece in the 1960s and 1970s. The website continued: Buttons in a variety of sizes and colors. Buttons for shirts, trousers, coats, dresses ... It is not unlikely that in some old grandfather's coats the buttons will be from this industrial unit! While this building has likely been abandoned for several decades, we know that Greek officials have been contemplating what to do with the land it sits on since at least 2015. (en)
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