This is what happens when you use a face swapping app in the museum
museums are not always fun But some have Discovered a new way to go through the process funny and, to top it off, cause a sensation on the social networks Yes Yes. All this with just spending an afternoon in the museum How? Taking advantage of the face swap applications Photo editing tools that allow us to put our face on another person or thing.But what's so fun about that in a museum, you ask. The answer is exchange your face with classical statues, sculptures and busts The result is most funny
Example was tabled by forum userReddit ,Jake Marshall , who hasn't thought twice about posting his feat on the Internet. What are you going to spend the afternoon at British Museum in London? Take your mobile phone charged and one of the apps to make Face Swap that are fashionable, like MSQRDor Snapchat The character in this story definitely seems to have had a good time among millennial sculptures
Egypt has always had something exotic and mysterious about it.Those pharaohs with their showy and showy hats”¦ tempting, right? Something like this must have thought Marshall, who has posed next to several statues regardless of whether they were hieraticin order to make funny faces. Specifically, his in the face of those, and that of those in his. An exchange that would be just as fun without grimacing or doing weird things.
It's true, these apps achieve very unrealistic results They don't even out different skin tones , they make our features not fit in the correct position, they create strange vibrations in our eyes and boca inside the image but… who cares? You can sneak into the bust of a pharaoh, an emperor or whatever that statue was with its worn and almost disfigured face. And best of all, you can become a hero on social networksOf course, Jake Marshall didn't hesitate to share his creations via Snapchat
We find it more interesting, and possibly fun, to know the faces of the people who walked with this subject through the museum watching the poses he struck and the selfies he took. Surely they were also photos, although with a gesture of astonishment rather than a joke. And it is that it is not the most common to take this type of snapshots or videos in a museum. Will the time have come to open the ban? Will they put some type of restriction on this type of practice in museums?
In these photos, only one of the subjects animates his face, since the statues, for the moment, cannot speak. However, the result is hilarious and witty, and can open many doors to both bored visitorsas well as the museums that decide to use their exhibitions in a different and fun way.Of course, it has brightened our day and we are already looking forward to going to any museum to see how this practice works in our own flesh. And you, would you change your face for another that is a few centuries old?