Location: England, London, 16 Montpelier Road, Ealing
Facts: In 1944, Andrew Green, then aged 16, visited a dilapidated and abandoned at 16 Montpelier Road, Ealing, in the London suburb home. "I was with my father who had commandeered this house to store furniture from bombed houses." Built in 1833, we recorded it a murder and suicide twenty until 1934, again from the top of a tower sixty feet. "At the top of the tower, I felt a strong desire - I can not express otherwise-out of the window to go to the garden, with the firm belief that I would not do me wrong I had already released a. leg when I felt a firm hand on my neck and heard my father say, "? But what are you doing here," when we left, I turned around and I photographed the empty house . ""The day I went to get the pictures, the photographer asked," Who is the girl in the window? "I was at first incredulous, knowing that the house was empty, but the image of a character. was indeed impressed the film later, I discovered that a 12 year old girl, Anne Hinchfield, fell from the tower in 1886, I thought. "? Well, well, would I actually photographed a ghost" the negative and the camera were sent to Kodak. Andrew Green received back a letter confirming that everything was perfectly normal and there was no reason he could not take a photograph of something that you could not see, with two conditions:
-There Not had to have a filter on the lens,
'And you had to use a special film -Verichrome.
Both conditions were actually met, implying that the photographic emulsion was able to save an image between 380 and 440 millimicrons of the infrared portion of the light spectrum. "I thought then that this was the formula for a ghost I sent everything in Ilford, Kodak competitor for verification I received exactly the same letter with a postscript.." Word with a film, the image would have been better "" ...
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