04/18/2026
There’s a lot of debate these days about AI and digital tools like Photoshop—and rightfully so. They’re not meant for everything, and they should never replace the original artifact or the truth behind it.
But when used carefully and responsibly, they can do something pretty incredible…
They can help us see what was once nearly lost.
This image started as a worn newspaper clipping—flat, faded, and full of ink patterns that obscured the original detail. With the right approach, we’re able to remove those distractions and bring the image back closer to what it once was.
Not altered. Not reinvented.
Revealed.
In this case, the transformation feels nothing short of miraculous—taking something barely readable and restoring it into something worthy of display again.
It’s a reminder that sometimes, modern tools don’t replace history…
they help us reconnect with it.
“In His Kansas Prison Studio, an Inmate Artist Paints Murals Few Will Ever See”
Behind the walls of the Kansas State Penitentiary, where most stories are defined by confinement, one man found a different kind of freedom—with a brush in his hand.
Ernie Aspinwall, serving two life sentences, became known not for his crimes, but for his remarkable talent as an artist. Within the prison, he transformed blank walls into vivid scenes—windows to a world far beyond the bars. Many of his murals were seen only by inmates and staff, hidden away from the public eye.
One story, however, reached beyond those walls.
After reading about the destruction of Leavenworth County's last covered bridge—struck by lightning and lost to fire in August of 1958—Aspinwall set out to preserve it the only way he could. Through his imagination, he created a striking 4-by-6 foot painting of the bridge as it once stood.
That painting would later hang in a building in Topeka, quietly admired by those who passed through. But when the building was eventually torn down, the painting disappeared—its whereabouts unknown, its fate a mystery.
Yet Aspinwall’s story did not vanish with it.
Today, visitors to the Historic Kansas State Penitentiary can stand in the very spaces where he once worked and see the surviving pieces of his artistry—powerful reminders that even in the most unlikely places, creativity endures.
To hear more about Ernie Aspinwall and to see these remarkable works for yourself, join us Behind the Walls.
Book your tour at:
lansingkansashistory.com
This was recreated from a newspaper clipping restored through Photoshop and AI.