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50 Unexplainable Photos

Marc Chevalier

Gone Home
Messages
18,192
Location
Los Feliz, Los Angeles, California
What's so creepy about two little kids on a mini couch???? It's creepy that you think it's creepy.


Linc, this is a postmortem photo. The child on the sofa is dead.

Back then, it was not uncommon for grieving survivors to have pictures taken of their recently-deceased loved ones, especially if no other images existed. It helped people to not forget the faces of their dead.

See here: http://www.google.com/search?tbm=is...36l0l7158l22l20l0l0l0l0l371l3366l5.5.5.3l18l0
 
Messages
13,444
Location
Orange County, CA
Marc Chevalier said:
Linc, this is a postmortem photo. The child on the sofa is dead.

Back then, it was not uncommon for grieving survivors to have pictures taken of their recently-deceased loved ones, especially if no other images existed. It helped people to not forget the faces of their dead.

In fact there were even photographers who specialized in postmortem photography!

Even creepier is sometimes they would have the dearly departed propped up in a sitting or even standing position to appear lifelike. One picture I saw looked, at first glance, like a typical family portrait of the era then I realized the little girl in the picture was dead because on careful examination part of the stand propping up the corpse was visible.
 
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Lincsong

I'll Lock Up
Messages
6,907
Location
Shining City on a Hill
Linc, this is a postmortem photo. The child on the sofa is dead.

Back then, it was not uncommon for grieving survivors to have pictures taken of their recently-deceased loved ones, especially if no other images existed. It helped people to not forget the faces of their dead.

See here: http://www.google.com/search?tbm=is...36l0l7158l22l20l0l0l0l0l371l3366l5.5.5.3l18l0

She's dead???? Whoa!

Well, no different than some people in the present tattooing dead relatives names on their arms, necks, chests etc. or driving around with stickers of dead people's birth and death dates plastered on the backlite of their car. Or my personal creepiest; having a "birthday" party for a dead person. I know of a woman whom she and her husband slept in separate rooms for 25 years, yet on St. Valentine's Day she'd put a balloon on the guy's grave that read; "World's Greatest Lover".
 
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Story

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,056
Location
Home
I'll just leave this here.

hU7wq.jpg
 

scottyrocks

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,173
Location
Isle of Langerhan, NY
She's dead???? Whoa!

Well, no different than some people in the present tattooing dead relatives names on their arms, necks, chests etc. or driving around with stickers of dead people's birth and death dates plastered on the backlite of their car. Or my personal creepiest; having a "birthday" party for a dead person. I know of a woman whom she and her husband slept in separate rooms for 25 years, yet on St. Valentine's Day she'd put a balloon on the guy's grave that read; "World's Greatest Lover".

I'm sorry, but a photo of a dead person, no, make that a photo of an actual person that is dead in the photo, is in a whole different league.
 

Warbaby

One Too Many
Messages
1,549
Location
The Wilds of Vancouver Island
I have a small collection of post-mortem photos of children and I've come to see them not as something creepy or bizarre, but rather as poignant and touching. At the time when post-mortem photos were popular, photography was still a relatively new thing and having a likeness of a loved one was pretty amazing and not all that common. If a loved one died, particularly a child, and no photographs had ever been taken, a photographer would often have been quickly called in to take a final photograph as a remembrance.
 

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