winger
Subscriber
As a new mom (5 months now), there's no way I could take pictures for this group, but I applaud those who can. It would be a priceless memento for the family.
If it works for some grieving people as a method of closure than I am not against the practice. It's not really that much different than the "sleeping" children photographs taken after the death of a child and the mourning jewelry worn in my grandparent's day. That being said I wouldn't want pictures of me taken after death, nor would I take one of anyone I'd lost. That's just not how I want to remember them all quiet and still. It would depress me utterly.
For the same reason, I have no interest in seeing a deceased person in an open coffin. When my father died, my mother asked me to go with her to view his body, and I did so for her sake. When she died (18 months later), I did not want to remember her as a body in a coffin, so I did not view her. It's not that I'm squeamish, it's just that I would rather remember them as they were when alive, not dead.
It's not a new thing, tintype death portraits of infants are common.
If the photographer has the skill to pull it off, why not? If it helps the parents through a very difficult situation, it's a good thing.
Similar photos of infants (and, to a lesser extent, even of adults) were not unusual in Victorian times. They may seem rather strange to present-day sensitivities, but times and circumstances were very different then, and if the pictures helped in grieving.......
Also - I've done a little wet plate/tintype photography - exposures were not in the 10-15 minute range - using an old camera of the period in daylight you are talking at most a 3-8 second exposure...by the late 1880's exposures in a studio were down to 1-3 seconds with wet plates based on contemporary accounts...
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