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"There's no way Sally got one. It must be a picture of someone else's tattoo.

"

"But the tattoo is of a dog's paw print, and I know she loves her dog a lot. It must
be real."

"She might have posted it just to see how people would react."

Hubert Provand's 1936 photograph of the Brown Lady of Raynham Hall is one of
the world's most famous "ghost" photographs, but you may or may not believe the
image is real. Some experts have claimed that Provand may have used trick
photography to create the image of the lady. It couldn't have been faked with a
computer since it was taken before computers even existed. However, Provand
could have combined two images to create the ghostly photograph. To this day, the
photograph may not be satisfactorily explained. Even though the image might not
be real, many visitors to England's Raynham Hall still look for the ghost of the
Brown Lady.

1. We may never know how Provand created the image.


2. Provand's photograph couldn't have been digitally altered.
3. The image of the ghost might actually have been painted on the picture.
4. Some critics say Provand must have faked the image by putting grease
on the camera lens.

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