This 1895 Photo of a Girl Holding Her Sister’s Hand Seemed Normal — Until Restoration Revealed
The older girl, Lily, according to the inscription, had her eyes focused directly on the camera. Her expression was difficult to read, not quite sad, not quite angry, something closer to resignation or perhaps determination. The younger girl, Rose, had her head tilted slightly toward her sister. Her eyes were also on the camera, but they seemed unfocused, glazed.
Her mouth was slightly open, and then Helen noticed the hand. Rose’s hand, the one holding Lily’s, had an odd quality to it. The fingers were curled in a way that didn’t seem natural. The skin tone appeared slightly different from the rest of her visible skin. darker perhaps or discolored in a way that the sepia tone didn’t quite hide.
Helen pulled out her measurement tools and examined the photographs dimensions and mounting style. Everything was consistent with 1895 photography techniques. The image wasn’t a modern forgery, but there was something wrong about it that she couldn’t articulate. She decided to have the photograph digitally scanned at the highest possible resolution.
The society had recently acquired a new scanner capable of capturing detail at 12,800 dpi, resolution that would reveal things invisible to the naked eye, things that Victorian photographers and viewers would never have seen. The scan was scheduled for March 18th, 3 days later. Helen placed the photograph in an archival storage box and tried to put it out of her mind.
Leave a Comment