How many new wrinkles do you have since Donald Trump took the oath of office on January 20? Probably as many as the number of people who actually attended the 2017 inauguration.

Hundreds of on-the-ground and aerial photos released Monday by the National Park Service this week give another look at the crowd size at the event, which became one of the first dramas of the new administration. The pictures draw further doubt on the president’s claims that “I had the biggest crowd in the history of inaugural speeches.”

Trump spent his first full day in office erroneously bragging about how many people showed up to see him get sworn in. While millions took to the streets in opposition, he was calling NPS’s acting director to demand the release of photos that would buttress his claims.

Press Secretary Sean Spicer’s first briefing from the White House consisted of him giving the media false statements about the crowd while accusing them of lying.

“This was the largest audience to ever witness an inauguration. Period,” Spicer screamed. “These attempts to lessen the enthusiasm of the inauguration are shameful and wrong.”

Crowd size numbers are not easy to calculate, which is a major part of why NPS stopped releasing official numbers back in the nineties. But even without those estimates, Metro ridership stats and side-by-side images comparing Trump’s inauguration to Obama’s in 2009 demonstrate that Trump’s claim lacks merit. Even some fans of the new president complained about the sparsely attended parade.

And now, there are even more images. NPS released hundreds of photos from the 2009, 2013, and 2017 inaugurations in response to Freedom of Information Act requests from Buzzfeed.

These photos probably won’t totally clear up the issue, though. When researchers presented side-by-side images of crowds during the inaugurations in 2009 and 2017 to Americans and asked them which picture had more people, 15 percent of Trump voters gave the wrong answer.