While trying to decide which ghost photos are the "best" is largely an exercise in subjectivity, it's difficult to know which ones are the best with any degree of objectivity. These are the photos I consider the most authentic "captures" of ghosts ever caught on film, but I leave it to you to decide for yourself how real they may be. Of course, I realize that almost any photo can be hoaxed, but many of these were taken many years or even decades before digital cameras and the advent of Photoshop and other photo manipulation software came on the scene, making them somewhat more difficult to fake than it would be today.
10. The Queensland Photo, 1946
Taken in 1946 in Queensland, Australia by a mother who was taking a picture of her teenage daughter's grave. Nobody was in sight at the time, but when the picture was processed the image of a child appeared, apparently sitting on the grave. The mother does not recognize the child, thereby reducing (though not entirely eliminating) the possibility that it's a double exposure.
9. The S.S. Watertown Faces, 1924
8. The Wem Fire Apparition, 1995
This famous photo of a young girl looking out from a raging fire was taken during a 1995 structure fire at Wem town hall in Shropshire, England. Shot from across the street by a local photographer, nothing unusual was seen at the time but once the negative was developed he noticed what appeared to be a young girl standing in the doorway of the burning building. Firemen found the photo so disturbing that they sifted through the ashes afterwards searching for the remains of a body but found nothing, leaving everyone wondering who the girl may have been. Not surprisingly, there is a bit of local folklore which claims that a young girl named Jane Churm accidentally burned the town hall to the ground in 1677 when she dropped a candle, and her ghost has been reputed to haunt Wem town hall ever since. Once a firebug, always a firebug I guess.
7. Bachelor's Grove Cemetery, 1991
One of those "too-good-to-be-true" photos, this one actually has a pretty good pedigree because it was shot by a professional paranormal investigator (and notice it was also taken in broad daylight, as opposed to most cemetery investigations which are almost always shot at night). The picture was taken at the Bachelor's Grove Cemetery in Illinois by the Ghost Research Society on August 10, 1991. Photographer Mari Huff was using high-speed monochromatic film in the area where their equipment had detected several electromagnetic anomalies, and captured this image of a woman in period costume"”complete in a burial shroud of the era"”sitting on a gravestone. Note that parts of her lower legs appear to be transparent. Looks staged, I know, but then what's a real ghost supposed to look like?
6. The Corroboree Rock Spirit, 1959
5. HMS Daedalus Photo, 1919
4. Toys-R-Us, 1978
3. The Lord Combermere Photo, 1891
2. The Chinnery Photo, 1959
1. The Brown Lady of Raynham Hall, 1936
J. (Jeff) Allan Danelek, a resident of Lakewood, Colorado, has been a Fortean writer on a number of paranormal subjects since 2002. To see more spirit photos or to read articles on a range of curious subjects, visit Jeff's website at www.ourcuriousworld.com.
2 comments:
astonished photography- really this is amazing photograph of ghost unbelievble!
Really amazing photographs.ghost is scary for me.im afraid of ghosts.STC Technologies
Post a Comment
Please Leave Your Precious Comments Here