That's great! I'd love to have that! Shhhh.......but I also love Victorian Post-Mortem Photography. Told you........creeeeeepy!
My husband's family has kept everything(and I mean everything) over the past 100 or so odd years and it's all in my warehouse right now. I really, really need to go through these rooms and find some great stuff like that. We're talking 3 stories of warehouse, though and the whole entire upper story is full of nothing but antiques and things from the time this house was built in 1904.
OK,...so...I've been googling and oggling "Victorian post-mortem photography". I had not heard of that, to my knowledge.
Definitely weird stuff. But not so weird I didn't gawk for about an hour. LOL.
Yeah....I was reading about it....and oddly, have no problem looking at any of them myself (I did go to med school for 2 years, before dropping out, and loved gross anatomy).This guy has a whole website dedicated to it. Costs money, though! Here's his collection on Flickr. Like I said,though, it's hard for some people to look at. Lots of the pics are of children and infants. There are even some I have a very very hard time looking at. I tend to skip over the children ones a lot. A lot of people don't understand why this was done,but, if you think about it, back then, there was no such thing as a personal camera so a lot of the time the family had no photos of their loved one so they would quickly shell out the money to have a photo done after death so they had something to remember by.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/thanatosdotnet/sets/72157600887340360/
I have noticed there are some families, maybe to do with religion, not sure....who still to this day photograph the dead...in the casket, you know. But not my family, it would just never occur to us, I guess. It never has occurred to us yet.
The hardest part about seeing those pics is wanting soooo bad to know the stories behind them. Like the twin boys. How could they have possibly met their fate together? I want to know the story behind so many of them...