A photograph can capture one’s attention and immediately stir emotions. As your curious mind tries to decipher its backstory, you’re also left in awe of this image that speaks a thousand words, as the cliché goes.
The images on the Utterly Interesting subreddit are excellent examples. All 91,000 members share a fascination for captivating snapshots, many of which are historical moments frozen in time.
We picked out some of the group’s best pictures, those that stood out to us. Hopefully, they strir up your curiosity.
#1 The Seiko TV Watch Back In 1982

Image credits: dannydutch1
#2 A Little Alpine Refuge That Was Built More Than 2700m Above Sea Level In Italy’s Dolomite Mountains (Mount Cristallo)
This refuge has been built inside one of the peaks of the massif, with brick walls, a slanted roof, two doorways and four windows framed in wood.

Image credits: dannydutch1
#3 Replica Dog Tags Of Every Soldier Who Never Made It Back From Vietnam

Image credits: senorphone1
Looking at these images may beg the question, “What makes a photograph captivating?” The answer will, of course, depend on who you ask. For underwater photographer Eric Engbretson, it’s the product of the photographer’s appreciation and oneness with their subjects.
“If you fall in love with your subjects and let them teach you, it will be impossible for your images not to mirror that love and appreciation,” Engbretson wrote in an article for LinkedIn.
#4 The Size Of This Flag Flown On A Spanish Ship At The Battle Of Trafalgar (1805)

Image credits: dannydutch1
#5 Artist Mr Doodle Has Spent Two Years Covering Every Square Inch Of His £1.35million House In Doodles
Working his way through 900 litres of emulsion, 401 cans of spray paint, 286 bottles of drawing paint, and 2,296 pen nibs.

Image credits: reddit.com
#6 Inside The Walls Of Mont Saint-Michel, France

Image credits: dannydutch1
For wilderness landscape photographer Shane Davila, a captivating photograph has a third characteristic outside of pleasing composition and technical proficiency: impact. Davila’s article for Wild Scenic simply defined it as “a subject caught in a unique moment.”
“It is the photograph’s ability to capture the genuine attention of the viewer for some extended period of time,” he wrote.
#7 In Iceland, The Last Mcdonalds Cheeseburger Was Sold In 2009

Image credits: dannydutch1
#8 The Skeleton Of A Stingray

Image credits: No_Dig_8299
#9 The Coat Vice-Admiral Horatio Nelson Was Wearing When He Was [unalived] At The Battle Of Trafalgar – 21 October 1805 – The Bullet Hole Is Visible In The Left Shoulder

Image credits: dannydutch1
An eye-catching photo follows the basic “rules” of symmetry, framing, and composition. But for Walla Walla-based photographer Victor Attoh, these rules are more of guidelines to assist in creativity. For him, a captivating photograph offers a unique perspective.
“A new perspective can bring new life to the same old scenes,” Attoh wrote in an article for the Discover Walla Walla website, referencing a quote from motivational speaker Wayne Dyer that says, “If you change the way you look at things, the things you look at change.”
#10 This Seems Relatively High. This You? If So, Why?
u/No_Curve_8141:
The industry started making sound levels abhorrent. The apologists will say that it’s your fault because you don’t have a mega lit sound system, but it’s the same way in movie theaters now. Inaudible dialogue with ear-shattering music and explosions.
Imprison the sound engineers I say.

Image credits: screaminbeaman82
#11 A Seaman’s Request For An Extraordinary Leave Of Absence, 1967

Image credits: dannydutch1
#12 The Spiral Staircase In Loretto Chapel, Santa Fe, Known As The “Miraculous Staircase,” Built Without A Center Support And Without Nails

Image credits: senorphone1
Photos that grab attention tell a story through images. You don’t need to read the caption to know what it’s all about, as the image itself helps you create the narrative. For Denver-based photographer Justin Viens, the storytelling aspect adds the most value.
“The narrative behind an image draws the viewer in and gives the photograph a lasting impact,” Viens wrote in an article for his website.
#13 In The Atlantic Ocean Off The Coast Of Iceland Is A Lighthouse At An Altitude Of 40 Meters
It was built on Westman Island in 1939 a time when helicopters were not yet in use. Master climbers were used during its construction and for transportation of materials.

Image credits: reddit.com
#14 One Of Stalin’s Pipes, Depicting Him And FDR Playing Chess. It Was Given To Him In 1945 By The Visiting Us Chess Team

Image credits: dannydutch1
#15 The Hospital Room Of Julius Klingebiel, Cell 117

Image credits: No_Dig_8299
We’d also like to hear your thoughts, dear readers. Which of these photos grabbed your attention the most and why? Share them in the comments, and feel free to upvote the ones that caught your eye.
#16 A Historic Journey Of Bridges. Devils Bridge Near Aberystwyth, Wales. The Original Medieval Bridge At The Bottom, The 18c Turnpike Road Bridge In The Middle And The Modern 20c Bridge Above

Image credits: dannydutch1
#17 Kathleen Did Not Light Up A Room

Image credits: dannydutch1
#18 These Were Sold During Prohibition Era As Flavour Blocks To Make Juice. The Box Came With Dried Grapes With Fermentation Instructions How “Not” To Make Wine

Image credits: dannydutch1
#19 October 30, 1937: Couple Wed A Month Find They’re Brother And Sister

Image credits: No_Dig_8299
#20 The Cost Of Having A Baby In The Us In 1956. Equates To About $1800 Today

Image credits: dannydutch1
#21 Museums Are Great

Image credits: dannydutch1
#22 To All The People That Have Learnt (Or Are Learning) English As A Second Language, I Salute You

Image credits: dannydutch1
#23 This 1971 Ad Is Outrageously Creepy

Image credits: dannydutch1
#24 Dating Advice From The 50s

Image credits: No_Dig_8299
#25 A Man Looking For A Wife In 1865. His Potatoes Were Bully So I’m Sure He Didn’t Have To Look For Long

Image credits: dannydutch1
#26 An 18th Century Travel Urinal With A Lover’s Eye Portrait. The Inscription “Ha Je Te Vois Petit Coquin”, Which Roughly Translates To “Ha! I See You, Little Rascal.”

Image credits: dannydutch1
#27 From A 1909 Dictionary Of Victorian Slang. I Say We Bring Back ‘Got The Morbs’ Into Common Parlance. (When Relevant)

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#28 Causes Of Death In London In 1632

Image credits: dannydutch1
#29 Museum In Japan That Showcases Various Naturally Formed Rocks With Faces On Them

Image credits: dannydutch1
#30 This Gold And Enamel Ring Was Made In Italy In The 17th-Century
Diamonds are set in the skull’s eye sockets and nose, and in the crossbones. Memento mori rings – from the Latin ‘remember that you must die’ – were intended to remind the wearer of the brevity of life.

Image credits: ExtremeInsert
#31 Jon From 1997, Clearly One Of The Good Guys

Image credits: dannydutch1
#32 In A 1977 Edition Of Vogue, This Was Printed As A Sensible Way To Lose 5 Lbs In 3 Days

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#33 A January Sale In 1855

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#34 Douglas Adams’ Grave Has A Bouquet Of Pens And A Small Towel Laid Out For Him. I Think He’d Appreciate This

Image credits: dannydutch1
#35 The Grave Of An American Pilot Buried By Imperial Japanese Troops. The Sign Reads “Sleeping Here, A Brave Air-Hero Who Lost Youth And Happiness For His Mother Land. July 25 – Nippon Army”. Kiska, Alaska, 25 August 1943

Image credits: dannydutch1
#36 An Ad For A Massager To Soothe Neck And Shoulder Muscles, 1971

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#37 April 6th 1968 – A Letter From George Harrison To Ivan, A Fan. In A Letter Sent To George, Ivan Wrote That He Was In A Band And Wanted To Play The Sitar. He Asked George If He Could Send Him The Money He Needed To Buy The Sitar. George’s Response:

Image credits: dannydutch1
#38 This Civil War Veteran Wears The Cap Of The Grand Army Of The Republic, Founded In 1866. The Number On His Cap Signals That His Post Was 139, Located In Scranton, Pennsylvania. This Prize-Winning Amateur Photograph 1935 Was Taken By Mrs. Nathan Klein Of Wyoming, Pennsylvania

Image credits: dannydutch1
#39 Dog Child, A North West Mounted Police Scout, And His Wife, The Only Handsome Woman, Members Of The Blackfoot Nation, Gleichen, Alberta, Ca. 1890

Image credits: dannydutch1
#40 Home Coming- Jimmy Stewart And His Dad Outside The Family Hardware Store, Indiana, Pa., 1945

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#41 Jimi Hendrix’s Drawing Of Elvis Presley After He Saw Him Live In Concert In The 1950s

Image credits: Disastrous_West_1414
#42 Andrew Jackson’s African Grey Parrot Named Poll Was Kicked Out Of Jackson’s Funeral For Swearing. Before The Sermon And While The Crowd Was Gathering, The Parrot Got So Excited He Started Swearing. It Was Very Loud With No Signs Of Stopping And Had To Be Taken Out Of The House

Image credits: dannydutch1
#43 Little Italy, NYC, 1943. These Ladies Mean Business. Photo By Fred Stein

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#44 What You Are Seeing Laid Out On The Table Is The Monthly Food Ration Per Polish Citizen In The Early To Mid-1980s

Image credits: dannydutch1
#45 When Hotels Used To Have To Put Up Signs Explaining That Electricity Is Safe And Not To Be Feared

Image credits: ExtremeInsert
#46 Marian Henel (1926-1993) Created These Naughty Psychedelic Tapestries In The Basement Of The Hospital For Nervous And Psychologically Ill People In Branice, Of Which He Was A Patient

Image credits: dannydutch1
#47 From A Set Of Pictures Of Mexicans Purportedly Arrested For Homosexuality In 1935. It Belongs To The Collection Of The National Photo Library Of The National Institute Of Anthropology And History In Mexico. (More Info In Comments)

Image credits: dannydutch1
#48 Clark Gable Photographed By Edward Weston In 1940, Driving His 1939 Lincoln Zephyr Coupe

Image credits: dannydutch1
#49 Sir Patrick Stewart Describes His First Experience Of A Hamburger In America. (You’ll Read This In His Voice)

Image credits: dannydutch1
#50 This Is The Border Between The Semnan Province And The Mazandaran Province In Iran, Where Desert Ends And Lush Forests Start

Image credits: dannydutch1
#51 The Corner Of 84th Street And Broadway In Manhattan. (1879)

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#52 “First The Man Takes The Drink, Then The Drink Takes The Man.” Made From Bronze, Glass, And Silver Patina By Thomas Lerooy In 2014

Image credits: dannydutch1
#53 C.s. Lewis’ Advice To A Young Girl On How To Become A Better Writer

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#54 That Time In A 1933 Article When Frida Kahlo Was Referred To As Someone’s Wife And Her Art Was “Gleeful Dabbling”

Image credits: dannydutch1
#55 The Last Vintage Shell Station In Winston Salem, North Carolina

Image credits: dannydutch1
#56 An Advert For The London Police Force In The 1930s For “Hefty Women” But “Must Be Fairly Good Looking”

Image credits: ExtremeInsert
#57 A Cyanometer, C. 1789, An Instrument That Measures The Blueness Of A Sky. Invented By Swiss Physicist Horace-Bénédict De Saussure And German Naturalist Alexander Von Humboldt Who Used The Circular Array Of 53 Shaded Sections In Experiments Above The Skies Over Geneva, Chamonix And Mont Blanc

Image credits: dannydutch1
#58 At The Wank Mountain In Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany, This Wankbahn Brings You To The Wankhaus On Top, Where There’s A Wank View Observation Area

Image credits: CarkWithaM
#59 Plague Cufflinks! These Cufflinks Contain Pictures Of Two Different Strains Of Plague-Causing Bacteria Discovered In 1894, The Names Of Which Are Engraved On The Back. It’s Believed That They Were Made By Fabergé, The Celebrated Russian Jeweller

Image credits: CarkWithaM
#60 Navigation Signs In Thessaloniki (Greece) Show How Much Calories You Burn If You Would Walk The Distance

Image credits: dannydutch1
#61 A 3000 Year Old Egyptian Statue Of A Woman In The Field Museum Chicago USA

Image credits: audrey01_celebrat
#62 Richard Vernon Had A Small Role As Colonel Smithers, An Executive Of The Bank Of England, In A Scene Opposite Sean Connery In The 1964 James Bond Film Goldfinger. His Age At The Time Of Filming? 39

Image credits: dannydutch1
#63 Yoko Ono, John Lennon, And Matt Dillon Outside The Dakota In NYC (Dec. 2nd, 1980)

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#64 An Actual Slave Auction Notice

Image credits: WaldenFont
#65 Everyday Is A School Day

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#66 From 1972. “Lady, I’m Walking Here”

Image credits: No_Dig_8299
#67 KFC Have Just Opened Its First Ever Pub In Hammersmith, West London Where You Can Indulge In Pints And Order KFC Straight To Your Table

Image credits: dannydutch1
#68 On September 25th, 1981, 58-Year-Old Thelma Pauline “Polly” Melton Went Hiking With Two Of Her Friends. According To Them, She Suddenly Sped Up Towards The End Of The Trail And Walked Far Ahead Of Them, Disappearing Over A Hill. She Has Never Been Seen Or Heard From Again

Image credits: WinnieBean33
#69 A Black Friday Event I Can Get On Board With

Image credits: dannydutch1
#70 How Much It Cost For The Rolling Stones To Record “Wild Horses” In 1969

Image credits: dannydutch1
#71 A Cage For Reviving Canaries Used In Coal Mines, With An Oxygen Cylinder, Made By Siebe Gorman & Co. Ltd, London. Circa 1890s

Image credits: dannydutch1
#72 Needle Used To Sew President Mckinley’s Stomach After He Was Shot In Buffalo NY. 1901

Image credits: CarkWithaM
#73 Names Of Things You Might Not Know

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#74 In Late February 1921, 2 Weeks Before Taking Office As Potus, Warren Harding Writes A Letter To The Richest Man In America, William Randolph Hearst, Thanking Him For Helping Him Win The Presidency With Favourable Coverage In Major Newspapers He Owned & Begging For His Advice

Image credits: dannydutch1
#75 This Chart Shows The Average Weekly Diet Of One Working Class Family From Oxfordshire In 1912

Image credits: dannydutch1
#76 Ted Bundy Lineup (With My Grandpa!) Murray, Utah. Oct 2, 1975

Image credits: FFSPixel
#77 Aerial View Of The South-West Corner Of The Remote Easter Island In The Pacific Ocean

Image credits: dannydutch1
#78 Sycamore And Maple Tree Mashup

Image credits: Least-Bear3882
#79 Storyboards Martin Scorsese Drew When He Was 11-Yrs Old For A Roman Epic: “The Eternal City”

Image credits: No_Dig_8299
#80 Apple’s Third Co-Founder Ronald Wayne, Sold His 10% Stake For $800 In 1976. (The Stake Is Currently Valued At $270 Billion)

Image credits: dannydutch1
#81 Open Shoe Case With Compartments For Eight Shoes, By Louis Vuitton, And Two Jewel Cases, One Open Showing The Velvet Interior And Compartments, 1934

Image credits: dannydutch1
#82 An Anglo-Saxon 10th Century Ce Pocket-Sized Sundial Found In 1938. The Pin, Known As A ‘Gnomon’, Was Placed In The Hole For The Relevant Month. When The Sundial Was Suspended From The Chain, It Used The Altitude Of The Sun To Calculate 3 Separate Times Of The Day

Image credits: dannydutch1
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