With the first photographs being produced over a century ago, the world captured in them looked very different from now. We can feel slightly disconnected from it and imagine we’re looking into a strange reflection of the past instead.
r/OldSchoolCreepy is perhaps a portal into it. People can share their vintage photography on anything from the primitive Halloween costumes of yesteryear, to Victorian-era portraits where something doesn’t feel quite right. Maybe it’s the grainy, black and white prints that provide a certain ghostly quality and make us so uneasy. There's plenty of strange contraptions and gruesome horror imagery too.
Check out Bored Panda’s picks from the page, if you dare...
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Martin Luther King Jr. With His Son, Pulling Up A Burnt Cross From The Front Lawn Of His Atlanta Home, April 1960
With so many photos being shared across the internet every day, it’s easy to take photography for granted and harder to remember just how far the technique has come. Each new smartphone boasts another million pixels and multiple lenses to capture life in stunning detail. Being able to fit all this technology in your pocket makes a stark difference from the clunky contraptions of old.
Not to mention, images are captured almost instantaneously now. Whilst Polaroid cameras first became famous due to their ability to print an image and develop it in under a minute, this is nothing compared to the split second that it takes a microprocessor to do the same digitally.
If You Ever Wondered How The American Buffalo Could Go From 30,000,000 To 300 In 50 Years, Pictures Like This May Give Some Idea (Buffalo Skulls)
Of course, technology is built on the imagination and creativity of previous generations. Without their innovation, we’d never be able to enjoy all the fun that photography brings us today. And whilst the digital format is now most common, we owe everything to analog photography and film.
With only improvements in the lenses, film, and capturing process, the methods behind it remained unchanged for a few generations. It’s what makes the vintage photos of the past look so vivid and real, even if “vintage” has become associated with aesthetic qualities nowadays.
Children After Working In The Mine
Department Store Wax Mannequins Melting During A Heatwave In 1929
Whilst we can make high-quality images at the touch of a button, there’s nothing quite like the intangible quality that analog brings. Maybe digital is just too clean and realistic, and that’s why almost all camera apps will have a number of filters to bring a little character to our shots.
There are even apps dedicated to replicating analog cameras of the past, with Huji Cam being a popular one in recent years. It’s strange to think that even with all the photo capabilities we have, the style of photos from a cheap, disposable camera is still something we lust for.
So My Aunt Casually Tells Me Today That She Once Found A Ton Of Skeletons In Her Garden
A Letter From Schizophrenic Patient Emmy Hauck To Her Husband. It Consists Only Phrase “Herzensschatzi Komm” (Darling Please Come) And “Komm Komm Komm” (Come, Come, Come ) Repeated Over And Over
When photography was first created in the early-19th century, the pioneers behind it could never have imagined that people would want their pictures to look slightly worse. It was difficult enough to even take clear photos in the beginning with cameras requiring to be mounted on a frame and subjects having to remain perfectly still.
The results were far from perfect. Not to mention, the equipment needed to do it was expensive and temperamental to use — best left in the hands of professionals.
A Train Shredded After A Boiler Explosion - There's Something About This Image I Find Weirdly Unsettling
Anti-Electricity Propaganda From 1900
The horror! I feel like this kind of nonsense is what I hear about 5G and vaccines today.
Halloween Costumes From The 1930s
I'm not sure what country this is in, but the 30's were an impoverished time for most of the world. Seems weird to spend money on making Halloween costumes. Maybe this was for a play?
However, as the technology to capture photos improved and became more readily available, the costs went down accordingly. People could afford to sit for their portrait in front of a camera rather than a painter. This might explain why people posing for their pictures look so stiff and unsmiling in the earliest portrait photography. Although, there’s another reason why this could be, and it’s a bit more horrifying.
Oldest Surviving Diving Suit, 18th Century
Tim Curry On The Set Of 'It' (1990)
A Full-Faced Swimming Mask Designed To Protect Women's Skin From The Sun In The 1920s
In a strange trend throughout the 19th century, people wanted to capture the likeness of their loved ones no matter whether they were alive or not. After all, a photo will remain for long after they do (or rather, did). Known today as post-mortem photography, it was a new take on mourning portraits that were painted of the deceased in pre-photography times. It was also surprisingly popular.
It Drinks
Melted Wax Figures Rescued From The 1925 Fire At Madam Tussaud's London Museum
Washing A Crucifix, 1938
Trying to capture someone’s best side is a challenge for all photographers, especially if your subject is dead. There were a few techniques used to make the deceased look less lifeless. One was making them appear as if they were sleeping, which is a better way to think of someone that has passed. They’d be carefully tucked into bed or laid against the armrest of a chair, as children often fall asleep.
A 16th Century Plague Doctors Mask
A Drunken Man In Top Hat And Tails Clings To A Lamp-Post, London, 1934. Photo By Bill Brandt
Photo Of Two Women With Super Long Hair
Long hair, long dresses, long plant, long window shutters -- I'm sensing a theme here.
However, others preferred to see their beloved as they were before and attempted to mask the fact that they were no longer with them. This resulted in macabre photos of the living posing with the dead.
With varying degrees of success, the telltale signs were the lack of life in the eyes (which were jarringly pinned open) and the slouched posture of the subjects (if they weren’t frozen stiff by rigor-mortis). Other bizarre techniques included painting eyes onto the closed lids of the deceased or drawing them onto the film before it was processed.
Linda Blair's Makeup Tests For "The Exorcist" (1973)
They really put her through a lot, almost broke her spine in one of the thrashing around scenes.
Some Paper Mache Heads From The First World War
Old Doll Factory
Whilst the results of these photos are no doubt creepy to us nowadays, they provided a way for people of the time to process the grief of death. They served as a memorial and a reminder of the people that once were, something to be celebrated rather than spoken of in quiet tones. It also highlights how death was considered in the past.
Human Teeth Found In The Wall Of A Building Formerly Used By A Dentist In The Early 1900s
1952 U.S. Advertisement For Van Camp's Pork & Beans
A Woman In The Wild West Wearing A Bonnet And A Mask Designed To Protect Skin From Sun Damage
With the lack of medical knowledge to treat or understand illnesses, death was seen often by people in the 19th century. Diseases such as typhoid affected millions during this time, with even the reigning Queen Victoria’s husband succumbing to it. The monarch vowed to wear black for the rest of her life to mourn her lost partner, setting the mood for the latter part of the century.
Meeting Of The Mickey Mouse Club In The 1930's
17th Century Metal Mask That Was Used To Restrain Individuals Who Were Considered To Be Insane
‘Hells Cafe’ In Paris 1920s
Grief and mourning were met face-on and post-mortem photography was just one part of this process. Even the perception of the term has changed since that era. Nowadays, it might conjure up images of police investigations into suspicious deaths. In movies and television, this is always played to the effect of death being a dark aspect of life and the corpse as something to be afraid of.
Humpty Dumpty 1939
Photograph Of A Victorian Baby Held By Their Mother
I love these. It was hard for the baby to sit still long enough for a photo to be captured, so lots of these old baby photos have the mothers or nannies in them pretending to be furniture.
The Original Ronald Mcdonald, 1963
So, whilst our lenses and cameras are the best they’ve ever been, the idea of capturing intimate photos of the deceased is something that’s been left in the past. If it ever makes a reappearance, our attitudes to death will need to change as well. After all, with all this technology available to us, would it be a good way to honor those no longer with us? Who knows, but at least it won’t be as creepy as the black and white photos here.
A Clean-Cut Charles Manson On His Wedding Day In 1955
The Moon From The French 1902 Movie "A Trip To The Moon"
Ahh so that is inspiration for "Tonight, Tonight" video of Smashing Pumpkins!
A Happy Clown From The Early 1900s
Goldilocks And The Three Bears, 1908
I take it the costumer had never seen a bear nor any photos of bears.
Freezing Off Freckles Procedure In 1930s
Glurpo, The World's Only Underwater Clown
My Grandfather And His Sister
Found This Weird Photo Online. The Title Said That It's From "Page 896 Of The American Florist, A Weekly Journal For The Trade (1885)". Please Make Special Note Of His Feet
Behind-The-Scenes Of Teletubbies' In The Late-90s
Children Salute The American Flag In Front Of The Morgan Hill School (California), 1930s
As a kiwi, remembering that Americans have to recite allegiance every day at school wigs me the hell out
I think most of us stay silent during that nonsense by about 4th grade. I certainly did. Never bought into the forced nationalism.
Load More Replies...Not very heil hitler is it? and this brain-washing/conditioning goes on to this very day....
Yes! But I do find comfort in seeing that other people are starting to realize just how brainwashed this country is. So much to see and so much brainwashing. I just feel really bad for the ones who keep denying it and get very angry about it when you mention it to them. It's easier to fool a man than to convince a man he has been fooled. Sad, very sad stuff.
Load More Replies...this used to be what they did instead of hand on heart, but once the nazis took it, they stopped doing it
Replace the American flag with the swastika and suddenly the picture looks very different.
Same gesture. It was adopted from the Roman Empire in both cases, dropped to hand on heart in America due to the rise of the Nazis.
Load More Replies...I don't care what other conservatives say : forcing your children to pledge alliegance to your flag IS creepy.
Lots of salutes in 1930's with right arm raised, usually accompanied by Sieg Hiel
it drives me crazy when i hear conservatives...including my own dad... scream about liberals trying to indocrinate our children when they still do this. i take my dad out every friday for bingo at the vfw as he is a veteran. usually it is just a fun evening with dad. but, recently they started the evening with the pledge of allegience and it is kind of strange knowing that most of these over 60 yrs of age people had this pounded into them that they can still recite it with ease.
The Bellamy salute was very popular until the Hitler Reich came into power
The stanse and posture reminds me of an earlier regime that did that to kids in Europe.
The Roman Empire? This photo was before WW2, both America and the Nazis adopted it from the Roman Empire.
Load More Replies...And they still salute the American flag like this in many parts of the country.
Ah... The ol' Bellamy salute! It fell out of favour after a certain group in Europe started using it.
Lots of salutes in 1930's with right arm raised. Usually accompanied by Sieg Hiel
My mom said that they recited the Pledge of Allegiance with arms outstretched, palms facing up, until World War II. They changed it to putting your hand over your heart because the old way looked too much like a Nazi salute.
And the salute was kinda similar to that of Nazis....arm raised 45 degree upwards
That's saluting the flag? Looks like the gesture Hitler & his minions did.
Actually this picture is probably slightly older, as it looks like they are doing the first version of the pledge, called the Balch Salute. In that version one arm was indeed outstretched in a military style salute. It was around the mid to late 20's when the version we use today was adopted
If you didn't stand,etc., You got sent to the principal's office for insubordination and "disrupting" the class. Utterly ridiculous and a waste of time. Never understood if church and state are supposed to be separate, then why is it still , " one nation under God"?? I'm sure (hopefully) this had changed over the past few years, but I know that they still sent my son's to the principal's office also for not participating and that was 5yrs ago.
Looks like the Nazi salute. . . We always put our hand on our heart (1950s).
"Fun" fact: The bit about "under god" wasn't added until 1954 by a Republican administration. Go figure.
In the 60s, in high school, me and a few others decided to not do it during an event in the auditorium. Very few people flipped their wigs, but there were a few, mostly from the football team. The principal, etc. ignored us rather than starting a discussion on why we were doing it.
Thkfully we didn't salute the flag this way when I was in school. We put our right hand over our heart and say the Pledge of Allegiance. This may seem weird to others but completely normal to us in the USA. 🇺🇸 Every country has their customs this one just so happens to be ours. (*There is certain exceptions to this. 1. Religious beliefs.)
seems a little Hitlerish to me... but he didn't come along for almost another decade...
For all you who hate America and don't want to put your allegiance to this country...leave. My family members died for that flag so your A$$ can be free. Just go to the commie country of choice.
It's technical been voluntary since the 40's but I don't remember doing at by 8th grade. It is weird huh?
THAT...does NOT look like a salute to the flag but to a certain former leader who shall remain unnamed...
They stopped the raised armed salute in America after a picture of children doing it was published in Nazi Germany..
It is not that they are saying the pledge of allegiance, it is the way they are doing it that is disturbing. I do not have a problem with saying the pledge.
For context, this was the original civilian "Bellamy" salute, named for the man who came up with it. It starts with the hand over the heart, and as they said "to the flag," they extended their hands towards the flag. It was done away with in 1942, for obvious reasons.
No one did. Look up Bellamy salute, maybe next time you won’t seem so ignorant.
Load More Replies...Then in the 50s, "Under God" was put into it. That's when I stopped quoting it.
when i was in middle school on the first day of school they would have us all go outside and do that.
I suspect this isn't children saluting the flag per say but a German dominated area using the German salute which was popular in the 30s as a way of being aligned with the Motherland
No. It’s the Bellamy salute. For f***s sake do some research or read a book or something.
Load More Replies...I know its really trendy to talk about how much it bothers some people but it's nice to think we still have some things to be united about with all the division in the world right now. Like we may both be pissed off at the nation for entirely different reasons but I still want to stand shoulder to shoulder with Americans than anyone else.
Three Girls In Masked Costumes At Halloween Festivities In College Hill, Cincinnati, Ohio In 1929
He's Probably A Good Boy But Sure Looks Odd
1938 - Trays Of Artificial Eyes
I guess the average age of a BP reader would make the 1990s ' the old days' ...
When a post is new, sometimes they tweak pictures, captions and post title, and I have seen a couple of times where entries were removed entirely (like here, the display of fake eyes was originally a colour pic). The worst is when they change a pic or title and make your already-posted comment look like you are an absolute drongo who didn't read a dot before commenting, had that happen too lol😅
Load More Replies...And to think, SOMEDAY (sooner than later) 'we' will find OUR photos being considered "creepy" and "outdated."
None of this explain the thread plot "Why the past is creepy". Sill don't know why.
When I went on holiday I found an abandoned hotel, it was called mas de canicatti
Or don't click on something that has "creepy" in the title if you're going to be a big baby about it.
Load More Replies...I guess the average age of a BP reader would make the 1990s ' the old days' ...
When a post is new, sometimes they tweak pictures, captions and post title, and I have seen a couple of times where entries were removed entirely (like here, the display of fake eyes was originally a colour pic). The worst is when they change a pic or title and make your already-posted comment look like you are an absolute drongo who didn't read a dot before commenting, had that happen too lol😅
Load More Replies...And to think, SOMEDAY (sooner than later) 'we' will find OUR photos being considered "creepy" and "outdated."
None of this explain the thread plot "Why the past is creepy". Sill don't know why.
When I went on holiday I found an abandoned hotel, it was called mas de canicatti
Or don't click on something that has "creepy" in the title if you're going to be a big baby about it.
Load More Replies...