Oops: for some reason, my pictures have not displayed, despite using the same uploading procedure as before - copying image address from newly-uploaded images to my own website. So for now, one has to click on the URLs while I endeavour to sort the problem.
Here are 4 pix showing how my flour-imprinting procedure performs with that plastic toy referred to earlier, approx half human scale.
https://shroudofturinwithoutalltheh...6/01/dsc03225-from-stepladder.jpg?w=229&h=300
This shows the new large toy, alongside a metre rule (far left) and the 2 much smaller toys used in previous work. One can see the first stage imprint. The imprint of the torso and limbs did not have the grotesque distortion one saw earlier in that powder-frottage system reported by David M. (There is a subtle kind of distortion that is not immediately obvious, which I might return to at a future date: suffice it to say that the image on the Shroud may be slightly wider than that of the subject from which it was imprinted WHICH MIGHT NOT HAVE BEEN A BAD THING!
However, the head did show obvious width enlargement/ lateral distortion, deliberately so, because I always make a point of reporting my results warts an'all.
https://shroudofturinwithoutallthehype.files.wordpress.com/2016/01/dsc03241.jpg?w=169&h=300
After taking that photograph yesterday, I then soaked the imprint in warm water, and waited for it to plump up to make a bas relief. (There's a possible link there to the Lirey pilgrim's badge from the mid-1350s which shows a strangely bulbous and some might think unflattering representation of the man on the shroud in both frontal and dorsal views, but I'll spare you my unbridled speculations for now).
The wet imprint was then stuck to the wall tiles on my shower cabinet for photography.
https://shroudofturinwithoutallthehype.files.wordpress.com/2016/01/dsc03075.jpg?w=300&h=169
So what about the problem head, where linen tends to drape round the sides giving hideous distortion? Can that be prevented, or at any rate, anticipated and avoided?
Yes, obviously, and there are various measures one can take. Here's just one where, in a separate experiment, I taped off the frontal area I wished to imprint, using sticky tape, before sprinkling with flour.
https://shroudofturinwithoutallthehype.files.wordpress.com/2016/01/dsc03087.jpg?w=640&h=583
Here's the image of that circumscribed face as it appeared late in the oven-roasting stage. Note the reasonable image quality without obvious distortion, and showing, incidentally, the ability of the technology to capture fine detail (compare with template in the previous picture).
But taping is not a solution where a real human face is concerned. Why not? It's that awkward feature we call the nose. It's too prominent, angular, generating creases as Hugh Farey said earlier. That's where one has to concede defeat as far as whole-body imprinting is concerned, and concede, as did Garlaschelli, that a separate bas relief was almost certainly required for the head, while not needing to ditch the entire imprinting technology!!!
Why would medieval fabricators bother with imprinting technology when they could simply call in an artist and get him to do something in a sepia shade? The answer should be obvious. A life-size image of a naked man on an up-and-over sheet of expensive linen, intended with its bloodstains to represent the crucified Jesus, was obviously intended to be appreciated immediately by the first-time viewer as a real BODY IMPRINT, not just any old run-of-the-mill devotional painting, and there are any number of additional subtle cues to the observant that scream "IMPRINT", not painting. But it helps to know what part of the crucifixion/entombment narrative the fabricators were doing their utmost to simulate to the best of the ability. No, not the body resting on a slab in the tomb, with linen making contact with the sides of the body. Nope it was earlier than that. It was transport of the body with Joseph of Arimathea's linen (delivered to the CROSS, not tomb) deployed as a make-shift stretcher. Supported by bearers at the four corners, with the body bowed down under its own weight, there would arguably have been little contact between linen and sides of the body, such that sweat and blood would have created imprints on frontal and dorsal surfaces only. In passing, the arching of the linen would have preferentially imprinted the SOLES, not tops of the feet which is precisely what one sees on the Shroud. (The pro-authenticists have a different explanation for that - rigor mortis - with all sorts of question marks over time-scales which I leave them to deliberate upon to their heart's content).
PS: will the comments accept (via way of Edit) the image address that worked in an earlier comment of mine, the one that introduced the new half-scale toy. I shall use the image-insert icon from the toolbar as I did earlier today. If a URL appears instead of the Image then "Huston, we still have an ongoing problem..."
Success! So what was different with those first 4 links. I think I know. I used WordPress's toolbar to reduce the size of my images on my site before pasting the link here. Maybe this site does not like images that have been monkeyed with...
I'll try again with just one of the four with 'as is' size from my own image files and see if that works. Let's start with whole-body imprint, stuck to my bathroom wall...
Success. Moral: don't bother in future with reducing image size.
Let's now draw a line under this comment, unless requested to do so, i.e. no more editing, lesson learnt.