mortuary-d4rling
mortuary-d4rling
Diana Eldritch 𓋹
18K posts
⚰️Mortuary science student 🎞️ Visual Artist⚔️ queer fantasy lover & gamer 👾🌿Bruja👁️Occultism & philosophy 🕯️Oddities, swords, antiques 🩸Horror, manga, books 🪦Macabre & folkloreInsta @la.sorciere__
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
mortuary-d4rling · 20 hours ago
Text
Tumblr media
158 notes · View notes
mortuary-d4rling · 20 hours ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Zana Bayne | NYFW Autumn Winter 2014
edited by sickfantaghiro
586 notes · View notes
mortuary-d4rling · 20 hours ago
Text
Tumblr media
29K notes · View notes
mortuary-d4rling · 20 hours ago
Photo
Tumblr media
by meerstone
49K notes · View notes
mortuary-d4rling · 20 hours ago
Photo
Tumblr media
fetish fantasy fashion - mercedes + gen 
523 notes · View notes
mortuary-d4rling · 20 hours ago
Photo
Tumblr media
15K notes · View notes
mortuary-d4rling · 20 hours ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Harry Price (1881-1948) was a British psychic and a paranormal researcher whose reputation reached extraordinary peaks because of his passion for unmasking fraud.
Already in his adolescence he was interested in the affairs of the beyond, and wrote a theatrical work on a case of Poltergeist in a Shropshire farm, England [see: the 8 phases of the polytergeist activity]. In a few years, the interest of public opinion attracted thanks to a very curious discovery, space telegraphy [Space-Telegraph], something like a primal wireless communication that theoretically worked perfectly, but when it was tried to put it into practice it was a failure. In his autobiography: Search for truth (Search for Truth), Harry Price states that the experiment was not entirely negative, since it served to prove that his idea did not work at all. Around 1908 he was interested in archeology, quite successful, since he managed to get several Roman currencies, axes and utensillos in the Sussex region, whose authenticity was confirmed by the antiquarium society [Society of Antiquaries]. But what really interested Harry Price were the paranormal phenomena, and there he directed his efforts since then.
For his arduous work as an unmasking of prodigies [who concealed his desire to find genuine wonders] he began his studies in occultism. In 1922 he joined the Magic Circle [Magic Circle], with a net esoteric cut, and then got fully into the study of traditional magic and prestidigitation. With these weapons he launched ghosts and fraudulent mediums.
He obtained his first success as a paranormal researcher at the end of 1922, when he was photographed by William Hope next to a spirit [see above]. The strange thing is not due to photography, but to the previous agreement between Harry Price and the Spirit, in which the latter promised to pose for the photo.
In 1923 Harry Price made a formal request to the University of London to create a psychic research department. The institution responded favorably, and Harry Price headed the working group [although without belonging to the Academic Staff], which would finally absorb the departments of the National Laboratory of Psychic Studies [National Laboratory of Psychical Research]. Harry Price, the famous ghost hunter, and Harry Houdini, skillful unmasking of fraudulent wonders, attests to spiritualist sessions where the diners had to make great physical efforts so as not to be evicted from their seats by the sudden movements of the speakers (see: when something invisible touches you)
William Hope, the Paranormal photographer, denounces that the speakers are animated by an invisible and undoubtedly intelligent force, with which it is possible to establish a communication code to talk with her (see: something called me by my name)
For example, a blow means yes and two strokes no (see: a blow: "Yes"; two blows: "no"; three blows: "Let me enter"). There were also random combinations that required the fine interpretation of exegetes that alluded to perfectly natural emissions and sound polyuses in a closed enclosure.
Daniel Dunglas Home, the great levitator of his time, witnessed paranormal phenomena of incredible size, such as the total levitation of the table and its diners. Others denounce light, phosphorescent appearances, invisible and lvid hands that pinch the ladies, wind bursts, objects that materialized and even the appearance of ectoplasm from different medium holes (see: what are the spirits made?)
Most of the charlatans of the time attribute these paranormal phenomena to the activity of triggered entities. A rationalist minority suspects the presence of unknown psychic, individual or group forces, acting in unison on the table (see: spirits and "charged environments"))
Already at the end of the 19th century there was a true fever around the speakers, which in honor of the truth did little justice in their name, since they rarely spoke.
The spiritualist Allan Kardec was perhaps the first to establish an orderly communication code, for which he managed to record messages of deep skepticism even in probably dead people. To know something more about this code we recommend reading his work The Book of Spirits (Le Liv re des Spiro).
There is no culture in the world that has been safe from the undesirable presence of the dead that rise from their graves to feed with the blood of the living. This allows us to reason that nigromance: the art of invoking the dead and returning them to life, or non -death, rather, was a rather lucrative trade.
In the first place, naturally, the body should be exhumed. He was later beheaded and one of his feet was amputated. Finally, the pi
El espejo gotico blogger
94 notes · View notes
mortuary-d4rling · 20 hours ago
Text
Tumblr media
1K notes · View notes
mortuary-d4rling · 1 day ago
Text
Tumblr media
William James Day
Girls on the Beach
1910
395 notes · View notes
mortuary-d4rling · 1 day ago
Text
Tumblr media
what it’s like being a lover girl full of rage
10K notes · View notes
mortuary-d4rling · 1 day ago
Text
Tumblr media
2K notes · View notes
mortuary-d4rling · 1 day ago
Text
Tumblr media
67 notes · View notes
mortuary-d4rling · 1 day ago
Text
Tumblr media
Edith Scob in Les yeux sans visage (1960)
702 notes · View notes
mortuary-d4rling · 1 day ago
Photo
Tumblr media
13K notes · View notes
mortuary-d4rling · 1 day ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
ETHEL CAIN SHOT BY SILKEN WEINBERG
5K notes · View notes
mortuary-d4rling · 1 day ago
Text
Tumblr media
Chen Zishan.
6K notes · View notes
mortuary-d4rling · 1 day ago
Text
Tumblr media
Masha Morgunova.
2K notes · View notes