I decided to try some other fruits and vegetables. But seriously, I remember how pleased Ray Rogers would get when other scientists didn’t just speculate but did actual experiments which might eventually lead to an understanding of how the image was produced. Ray did so himself, as we know. I’m glad, once again, to see Colin doing likewise.
The following image is best seen at about five feet or more unless you want to see the fruits and vegetables up close. (Sorry, I couldn’t resist).
“The following image is best seen at about five feet or more unless you want to see the fruits and vegetables up close”
Just blink so that the image shows up more clearly…
Reblogged this on Best of Shroud Story.
I see apricots on the eyelids. Hard to tell, they may be there or not. :)
Nope.Think floral, not fruit. Probably just someone’s pair o’ dahlia .
Are you suddenly a cryptoarcheoflorist? Those are apricot shoots, common to the Jerusalem Common Market. You also failed to notice the link between an apricot and a nectarine – a clear allusion to the Shroud – ‘necro-turino’. This is cryptoarcheoflora 101!
You forgot to mention the blood orange decals. But I’ll forgive you that, you not being a cryptoarchaeofructologist (Lat. fructus, fruit).
Apples and oranges!
Hilarious! This popped up as I was about to take a class of eight-year-olds, so I showed it to them, first close up and then gradually smaller and smaller till they got it. One of them was tremendously pleased that at last he understood what “The fruit of thy womb” really meant…
“The fruit of thy womb”….classic!
David, there are no apricots on the eyelids but in your dreams!
Neither Colin nor David can be an archaeocryptocarpologist (Greek: Καρπός; Latin: Carpus, literally “fruit”) overnight.
Not only are there apricot leaves on the eyelids, if one looks closely enough (you need to have a trained eye for this) you can clearly see the name ‘Del Monte’ on the leaves.
Dear David, don’t you mistake a trained eye for a biased one nor leaves for fruits…
o
or a photograph of avocado at reduced scale…
That’s not avocado, it’s a mango. Did you forget you are looking at a negative fructal image?
You’re negatively right. It’s a mangavocado.
A hybrid! Good catch, Max!
It’s a miracle! (Sorry, I couldn’t resist)