Hope this hasn't been endlessly debated already, but I spotted this ghostly face peering out of one of the lower panes in the window.
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Originally posted by nickspry View PostHope this hasn't been endlessly debated already, but I spotted this ghostly face peering out of one of the lower panes in the window.
It's almost certainly a trompe l'oeil, or some sort of photographic defect, in my view.Kind regards, Sam Flynn
"Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)
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Different face?
Hi Sam,
thanks for the reply. The face I see is not the same as yours. I guess this goes to show that the brain is capable of interpreting a single image in more than one way. I did some messing around with contrast/colour in photoshop and here's my enhanced version. Let me know what you think...
Regards,
Nick
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Originally posted by nickspry View PostThe face I see is not the same as yours. I guess this goes to show that the brain is capable of interpreting a single image in more than one way.Kind regards, Sam Flynn
"Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)
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Of course!!! hehe If there were 'something' in that window though I wouldn't be surprised!
Actually looking back at that pic- perhaps the row ended with Mary having her face shoved against the window left- hence the imprint on the dust!!!! NOT such a daft thought...................
Come on------there's NOTHING on the window! BUT- it could just be the reflection of the person taking it maybe!!!! Ho hum.........Last edited by Suzi; 10-05-2008, 12:38 AM.'Would you like to see my African curiosities?'
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Hi all.
Ah, the window photo - back to haunt us again!
Mitch - the drip-pan has been discussed at great length and the common view is that it is the photographer's (presumably Joseph Martin) developing pan. It is, after all, almost underneath the broken window pane through which he shot MJK1/2. Forgive me if I'm wrong here but isn't it true that the famous MJK shot was taken from outside before access was gained? Certainly, with the dimensions of the room, a full-length image from inside the door would have been impossible without extreme lens distortion.
Also, of course, Brenda, this would have ruled out the idea of someone being in the room when it was taken. Access came when permission was granted to open the locked room at 1:30pm and it is highly likely that Martin took this exterior image somewhere between 11:30am and 1:30pm.
In layman's parlance, the faces you are seeing are sometimes called 'The Man In The Moon Effect'. Anything vaguely round with two dots above a more central lower dot will make a face.
PHILIPTour guides do it loudly in front of a crowd.
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Originally posted by George Hutchinson View PostAnything vaguely round with two dots above a more central lower dot will make a face...Kind regards, Sam Flynn
"Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)
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Originally posted by George Hutchinson View Post
Mitch - the drip-pan has been discussed at great length and the common view is that it is the photographer's (presumably Joseph Martin) developing pan. It is, after all, almost underneath the broken window pane through which he shot MJK1/2. Forgive me if I'm wrong here but isn't it true that the famous MJK shot was taken from outside before access was gained? Certainly, with the dimensions of the room, a full-length image from inside the door would have been impossible without extreme lens distortion.
And while I know very little about old-fangled film photography, being a product of the digital age, surely there would be no need for a developing pan on-site? Doesn't that stuff need to be done in a darkroom? I may well know the answer to this somewhere in the clutter of my brain from my reading on the history of photography, but I assume someone like RJM or Mr Clack might be able to answer. Never mind what Hutchinson says, he's utterly unreliable, and not to be trusted
Cheers,
B.
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