New Photo Analysis Shows WCUFO to
Be Authentic!
Photographer Chris Lock (www.sai.org.uk/ChrisLock) recently
took one of Billy MeierÕs photographs of the highly controversial Wedding Cake
UFO (WCUFO) and processed it with Photoshop. The WCUFO photographs, long
attacked by skeptics as taken of a model made from a Ògarbage can lidÓ, are
probably the most controversial of all of MeierÕs more than 1,200 UFO photos.
Meier took 63 daytime and nighttime WCUFO photos, (which in itself
would be a most prodigious accomplishment for any professional
photographer/special effects expert using a Òmodel UFOÓ) as well as an amazing video.
Not only should the
following analysis conclusively establish the absolute authenticity of the
WCUFO (and MeierÕs still
irreproducible physical evidence as a whole) but it coincides with recent
corroboration of more of MeierÕs stunning and prophetically
accurate information.
This is ChrisÕ commentary
on the photos below:
ÒHere are the 3 images I
have produced just using brightness and contrast and then adding exposure
offset -- no fiddling with the photo. The leaves now seem to show up even more
clearly. If nah or yeah, it's got to be yeah. The leaves are clearly preventing
the left side of the craft from being seen. It disappears into them cf the
right hand side in the original (top picture).
A line taken from the
right hand outer edge of the "Cake" comes to nearly halfway through
the bottom outer rim. If you take the same on the left side the craft clearly
looks among the leaves. Besides, you can see them. Hope they all come out; but
anyone can do this for themselves on Photoshop.Ó
Wedding Cake original
With brightness up and
contrast down
Detail with exposure
offset applied
Exposure offset &
cropped zoom in
ÒThis one is using the
exposure control only so we can see into the under exposed dark shadows of the
tree and see what's there.Ó
Photoshop Exposure+4.63
& offset 0.0412 only
ÒThe craft's edge is
clearly hidden by the tree material. Try it for yourself and see.Ó
September 12, 2009
*ÓI opened the image in GIMP
and zoomed to 200%. Then I set Brightness to 115% and contrast to 123%.
If now you see the left hand
side of the WCUFO, the greenish tinge of the tree mixes with the corrugated
rims of the disks. Here, I initially thought that the tree is obstructing the
disks. But what sets out clearly is that the lower end of the greenish tinge
runs along the lower curve of the edge of the disk showing that it is probably
shadow. I might be wrong - I'm not a professional.Ó
*With further analysis by
Smukhuti on September 14, 2009