Photo Categories
The seven tabs below show the seven sections of photographs. Click on the tabs for more details on each section.
The seven tabs below show the seven sections of photographs. Click on the tabs for more details on each section.
In this section there are many 4 x 5 black and white films which illustrate Vernon’s photographic and dark room expertise in using different exposure times, etc. to produce very fine black and white negative photos of high contrast that resulted in the clearest features of the Man of the Shroud.
4×5 Black and White Films 4 x 5 are good for viewing:
In this section there are many 8×10 black and white films which illustrate Vernon’s photographic and dark room expertise. He used different exposure times, etc. to produce very fine black and white positive and negative photos of high contrast that resulted in the clearest features of the Man of the Shroud.
8×10 Black and White Films are good for viewing:
These 35 mm color micrographs (slides) taken of the Shroud, range from 6X magnification to 64X magnification. They show blood marks, body image, scorch marks, burn marks, H2O water marks, wax, and clear cloth of the Shroud. They are unique to this collection. Most important, they show what cannot be seen by the human eye, allowing a scientific observation of the image at the microscopic level.
35mm Color Transparency Micrographs are good for viewing:
The beautiful photos in this group are 4 x 5 high resolution color transparencies of the Shroud image and its blood marks. They allow the observer to see the Shroud as it is.
4×5 Color Transparencies are good for viewing:
Vernon took high quality 8 x 10 Ektachrome transparencies of the Shroud using the technique of photographing three separate parts of the Shroud. The three parts included: Frontal-Dorsal Torso upper, Frontal Torso lower, Dorsal Torso lower (middle: the front and back of the head, one end: front lower legs, other end: back lower legs). Photographing three parts instead of one (the whole Shroud at one time), increased the resolution of each part that resulted in much higher quality images of the Shroud.
8×10 Color Transparencies are good for viewing:
The 4 x 5 color transparencies below were done under ultraviolet light for the purpose of studying the blood, image, water, burn marks, and the background of the Shroud cloth. Interspersed among these UV photos are white light photos (WL) for comparison.
4×5 color transparencies with ultraviolet light are good for viewing:
The 8 x 10 positive color films below were digitally developed from Vernon Miller’s color negatives of the Shroud. These negatives are unique in that nearly all of his color photography of the Shroud was done using color transparencies.
8×10 color films from color negatives are good for viewing:
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1) Black and White Film 4 x 5 (section one)
a) Descriptive Photo
b) Full Image, Negative
c) Face & Chest, Positive & Negative
d) Matched Three Piece Full Image (Mosaic), Positive & Negative
e) Face and Hair, Positive and Negative
f) Face and Eyes, Positive and Negative
2) Black and White Films 8 x 10 (section two)
a) Descriptive Photo
b) Full Image, Positive & Negative
c) Full Image Edge Enhanced, Positive & Negative
d) Face & Chest, Positive & Negative
e) Matched Three Piece Full Images (Mosaic), Positive & Negative
f) Unmatched Images, Positive & Negative
g) Frontal Image, Positive & Negative
3) Color Transparency Micrographs 35 mm film – slides (section three)
a) Photo Orientation
b) Blood Marks
c) Body Image
d) Scorch Marks
e) Burn Mark
f) Water Marks
g) Wax Mark
h) Clear Cloth
4) Color Transparencies 4 x 5 (section four)
a) Descriptive Photo
b) Frontal and Dorsal Upper Body
c) Face and Chest
5) Color Transparencies 8 x 10 (section five)
a) Descriptive Photo
b) Full Image
c) Frontal Dorsal Upper Body
d) Frontal Lower Body
e) Dorsal Lower Body
f) Face Using a Color Technique from Jet Propulsion Laboratory
6) Color Transparencies Ultraviolet (UV) Light 4 x 5 (section six)
a) Photo Orientation
b) Ultraviolet light photos taken at burn areas at f/22 at 8 seconds
c) Ultraviolet light photos taken at blood, image, water, burn marks…
d) Ultraviolet light photos taken at burn marks at f/22 at 8 seconds
e) Ultraviolet light photos taken at burn marks
f) Ultraviolet light photos taken at blood marks
g) Ultraviolet light photos taken at burn and blood marks
h) Ultraviolet light photos taken at blood, image, burn and…
i) Black and White film taken under UV light for the purpose of studying blood marks and exudates…
7) Color Films from Color Negatives 8 x 10 (section seven)
a) Descriptive Photo
b) Frontal Dorsal Upper Body
c) Frontal Lower Body
d) Dorsal Lower Body
e) Full Image
The opportunity of accessing photos from this website carries the obligation to follow the license agreement HERE. Essentially these high quality photos are available to you but they must not be placed on any website without prior written permission; they may be used for other purposes as stated in the license. In downloading any of these photos, the license should be adhered to and credit for these photos should be clearly displayed in the following manner:
“© Vernon Miller, 1978. No unauthorized reproduction of Material on other Websites is allowed without prior written permission from the shroudphotos.com copyright holder. Original photos are available for free at www.shroudphotos.com”.
The License above applies only to the photos on the website. The copyright holder for the website www.shroudphotos.com and its text, is D’Muhala and Lavoie Trust, 2018, All Rights Reserved. No part of this website, except as otherwise herein stated in ‘the license’, can be copied without written permission from the copyright holder.