Lost Glasgow: Stunning images of the city through the ages
The new exhibition aims to 'cover everything from the majestic to the mundane'.
Remarkable images charting the changing face of Glasgow down the years have been brought together for a new exhibition.
Lost Glasgow - More than Memories opened on Thursday and organisers hope it will "cover everything from the majestic to the mundane, from the city's great buildings to its more humble corners".
The Lost Glasgow brand originally started life as a Facebook page, launching in 2014. It has now garnered an impressive 135,000-strong global following.
The page, which uses archive photographs to spark stories, memories and debate about the city's architecture and community, was launched following the success of the original Lost Edinburgh page.
Now the group has teamed up with the Glasgow City Heritage Trust to launch its first exhibition - with the help of contributors including the Herald and Evening Times, the Daily Record, the Scotsman, and members of the public.
Here are just a few of the striking photographs that will be going on display.
This image captures a group of boys near Charles Rennie Mackintosh's Queen's Cross Church, inspired by the ongoing Moscow Olympics to perform some gymnastic with the tools at their disposal.
They used an armchair as a springboard, a sofa base as a vaulting horse and a mattress as a crash mat - safety first.
Snapped by ex-Glasgow School of Art student Char Fitzpatrick, who was at the school between 1974 and 1978, this photograph shows three men travelling on the Underground.
Char, who travelled to Glasgow from Portland, Oregon, in the US in her student days, said: "I absolutely loved Glasgow... it was so different to anything I'd ever seen."
They don't do butcher shops like this any more: a woman inspects the Christmas chickens and turkeys at a butcher's at 634 Argyle Street in Old Anderston.
The plucked birds, sold whole, complete with head, feet and giblets, were a seasonal treat for those who could afford them.
World heavyweight champion Sonny Liston drew huge crowds when he donned Scottish national dress before an exhibition bout at Paisley Ice Rink.
He is pictured here walking past Central Station, in Gordon Street.
With the battle for civil rights in the US at its height, Liston said: "I am warm here, because I am among warm people and I feel that and react to it.
"When I return to the United States I will be cold again, for the people there are cold to me now and have treated me badly in the past."
Paul Flannigan, aged three, captured here sitting on top of the luggage ahead of a holiday, at the top of the ramp outside the old station.
Pictured is scaffolder Douglas Tennant, from Barrowfield, as he helps build the St Andrew's House office block - which would later become the Premier Inn hotel on Sauchiehall Street.
Over his shoulder can be seen the cooling tower of the old Pinkston Power Station, which once provided the electricity for Glasgow's tram network, and the old Buchanan Street Railway Station.
Ali Ahmed Aslam opened the Shish Mahal, in Gibson Street in 1964 - and in those days allowed customers to bring in their own "carry-oots".
The Shish celebrated its 15th birthday in 1979, by reverting their menu to 1964 prices - which probably explains the queue stretching out of shot.
The famous restaurant also claims to have invented chicken tikka masala.
Govan, June 1956: Members of Glasgow's "Quickly Club" pose outside Andy McNeil's bicycle shop with their new Quickly mopeds, which had a top speed of 25mph.
The men were assembling for their first run-out, to Houston in Renfrewshire. "And not a safety helmet in sight," as one Facebook user commented.
A familiar sight: George Square as a winter wonderland, nearly 60 years ago.
"The two futuristic Xmas trees were way before their time," comments a Lost Glasgow fan on Facebook.
Some things never change - like the weather. Pedestrians dash across the busy street, one with an umbrella, on a sodden day.
The picture was taken outside the Central Hotel's Restaurant Malmaison.
The year of this image is not precisely known, but it must have been taken between 1899, when the new, wider bridge opened, and 1903, when the Clutha ferries stopped running.
There is a huge amount to take in in this extraordinarily well-detailed photograph, given its age.
"Shades of spying?" suggested a Facebook commenter, and it's fair to say this image would not be out of place in a grand tale of espionage.
This image captures a view of Partick Cross and Byres Road in the 1950s, from the vantage point just outside the Three Judges pub (then known as Bennett's Tower Bar).
Visible are window shoppers perusing shoes at Bayne & Duckett's on the corner of Dumbarton Road.
Ruxton's Bar had been serving whisky, beer and porter to patrons since 1867, but was lost fol lowing the redevelopments of the Anderston area in the 1970s.
The well-dressed licensee, Charlie Ruxton, is entertaining locals from behind the bar.
The crowds captured here, stretching right down the Victorian platform, were all heading to nab a spot on the ferries for Rothesay and Dunoon during the holiday exodus.
One Facebook commenter on the Lost Glasgow page spotted some relatives, saying: "My Mum and Dad and Uncle are in the top left of photograph.
"Dad in the cap, Mum in coat and hat, Uncle Sammy in the middle of them...Happy days!"
Man's best friend: A wire-haired fox terrier and his pet person enjoy the sights, sounds and smells of the celebrated Barras market.
The Forth and Clyde canal at Maryhill was home not just to sailing boats in the 1950s but sometimes midget submarines.
The submariners used the canal as a shortcut from east to west coasts. This Stickleback-class sub was snapped in a small loch at Knightswood.
Lost Glasgow - More than Memories is open at the Glasgow City Heritage Trust, 54 Bell Street, from June 29 to August 31.