View Full Version : The hoax photo archive
Collection of hoax photos ranging from middle 1800's to present day.
http://www.museumofhoaxes.com/hoax/photo_database/category/before_1900/
Schroeder
11-13-10, 10:26 AM
Too bad most of the photos are actually too small to really see something...:-?
Sailor Steve
11-13-10, 10:28 AM
They're thumbnails. You can click on them to make them bigger. :sunny:
Funny thing is that today if someone do the same thing, it's a ruin foto (at least the final ones). The double exposures are quite easy and funny to play at!
lol, there isn't any photo showing the WTC towers. This page needs an immediate update.
Haha, this one is hilarious
David Starr Jordan, president of Stanford University, published an article in Popular Science Monthly describing the discovery of a new form of photography that he called Sympsychography. Starr explained that it allowed invisible brain waves to be made visible on a photographic plate -- similar to the way in which invisible X rays produce an image on a photographic plate.
The first test of sympsychography, Starr wrote, had been conducted by Cameron Lee, who burned an image of a cat onto a photographic plate merely by thinking of a cat. The Astral Camera Club, which met on April 1, then took the concept one step further. Seven of its members simultaneously concentrated their minds on a photographic plate while thinking of a cat. What emerged was not one man's image of a cat, but rather a joint "impression of ultimate feline reality." The resulting picture (shown here) was reproduced in the article.
Starr wrote, "it will be noticed that this picture is unmistakably one of a cat. But it is a cat in its real essence, the type cat as distinguished from human impressions of individual cats."
Jordan thought the readers of Popular Science Monthly would immediately recognize his article as a joke. Instead he received numerous letters from people who had taken the article at face value. One clergyman even confided to Starr that he had prepared six sermons on "the Lesson of the Sympsychograph."
...and that's how lolcats were born
Schroeder
11-13-10, 12:45 PM
They're thumbnails. You can click on them to make them bigger. :sunny:
I'm aware of that, but even the "big" pictures are still pretty small. ;)
kiwi_2005
11-13-10, 01:05 PM
Good find dowly, I like viewing stuff like this or anything with photos old and new like the life.com I found out about here I visit that site daily.
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