Genetic portraits
(Photo courtesy Ulric Collette)
By Sarah B. Weir, Shine Blogger | Parenting 19 hours ago
Ulric Collette, 31, started his series of merged family portraits by accident. The self-taught photographer was trying to age an image of his 7-year-old sons face by merging it with his own in Photoshop, and noticed how interesting the two faces looked spliced together. It inspired him to create seamless images showing the resemblance between brothers, sisters, cousins, parents, and children. He calls them "genetic portraits."
The juxtapositions of family members features enhance the physical similarities that cross generations similarities that we often recognize but cant pinpoint precisely. Hes made dozens of portraits over five years, some of which have been featured on Yahoo Shine before. But one of his most recent pictures might be the most striking of all: his 13-year-old daughter Ismaelles face paired with his 62-year-old mother Ginettes. While separated by five decades, the two look eerily identical. Its almost like looking into a crystal ball and seeing Ismaelles face as a mature woman.
I talked with a genetics expert this summer and she had the theory that grandchildren will look much more like their grandmother on the fathers side of the family, the artist tells Yahoo Shine. I wanted to try it out, and the results are pretty amazing! He adds that both his daughter and his mom love the portrait.
Collette, who is based in Quebec City, Canada, says hed like to follow up with some of his early subjects and see how their visual genetic similarities change as they age. He hopes to eventually turn the series into a book.
http://shine.yahoo.com/parenting/the-grandmother-granddaughter-mini-me-portrait-you-must-see-220040587.html
More:
http://genetic.ulriccollette.com/