Me, I love the caption on #4:
I never knew Mom when she had fun. By the time I was old enough to notice, she was just Mom, bustling around the kitchen, making sure the house was nice for us kids and Dad. She was never mean, exactly, just intent on making sure everything was in its place, done on time, taken care of. But every once in a while, after a glass or two of wine with dinner, she would start talking about her honeymoon to San Francisco, and she’d get the giggles. Couldn’t stop laughing. You’d never know it from looking at her, would you?
Me, I love the caption on #4:
Don't you think it's sort of mean of whoever-it-was to post that sort of caption about random strangers she found a picture of, and then posted on a website for anyone to see?
Full disclosure: the man totally resembles my grandfather (it's not him; wrong era; wrong location) so I probably feel more protective of them.
To tell the truth though, I always have trouble with doing the picture prompt drabbles. I do them sometimes, but I feel funny, making up the stories. I feel badly I villainized some woman I don't know. I saw someone else slash the two soldiers in another, and wondered what their reaction would be.
I assumed the caption was what was written on the back of the photo -- no?
I assumed the caption was what was written on the back of the photo -- no?
If it was, that's different (and funny, if the woman wrote it about herself). It didn't read to me like it was.
(and funny, if the woman wrote it about herself).
Yeah, that was my assumption.
I'd automatically assumed she'd written it; it has the sort of sharp-sour self-deprecation women in this society are taught to whip themselves with.
I don't think any of the captions come from anywhere but the photos themselves.
To submit a photo, you send a jpeg (or whatever) attachment in email. If a caption is submitted, it's submitted by the person who sent the photo.
See, there's a story in and of itself. Another layer on the question of how much you can trust anything you're/we're told.
Because we have no way of knowing whether any of these captions are real, then, do we? Whether they could be written on the back of the original, or added by the sender? And even if written on the back of the original, no way of knowing who wrote it.
So there's a whole deeper level to it: the captions. Because something as innocuous as "Sammy, Lucy and Chris, Manhattan Beach, 1933" could be completely inaccurate, in all innocence or by malice. What would the story be behind that?
Not going to tackle that one - hell, I just did, in all four Haunted Ballads novels, since that's the big underlying theme, apparently - but the question is one I find fascinating.
Too true, deb. I think #4 is an interesting picture, but the caption blocks me from really being able to write something. Not that I've written on any of them so far, but it makes that one that much harder.