it's two pictures, sometimes in cameras that use film the film doesn't wind on properly and so you get two exposures on one. Proffessional photographers use this sometimes to create illusion type pictures by not winding on the fil at all.
depends on the lighting and stuff of the original, then how much film wound on and how much light was on the new pic blah blah blha
It must be? Unless he had a dark room, stayed up all night, developed his photos, scanned them all in, and then uploaded them very very quickly. It was up on DSI the morning after Junior G.
Its a double exposure, used to get these alot with cheap disposible camera's The film doesn't wind on properly
But we already worked out it's from a digital camera I've had pics like this too. If you're moving the camera about in low lighting or something it happens. I dunno why exactly and i dont care
this happened to a pic that mick took when we were in amsterdam. u cud see right thru me but we havent got a clue how. cant find the pic but at the time we were pretty amazed