No. "Thou shall not create graven images".
Note that their children's dolls have no faces for the same reason.
A few of the museums will not let you photograph inside
It is Amish...if it is homemade. But you have to be Amish, or else..you are not Amish. But, homemade. amish.. no its amish if it fails at life ....see 123SHUP.webs.com
The Amish originated from Switzerland in the 1600's. Swiss Amish - Switzerland Amish.
Amish are called Amish because the founder of it was Jacob Ammann
The answer to this question is going to be a let-down really, but here it goes: Yes, you hypothetically could photograph a spirit going into the light, just as much as you could photograph any spirit. Assuming that there are photos of spirits, then one could logically surmise that you could photograph one moving on!
Amish Butter is butter mixed in with things that the Amish crops then mixed and hardened into Amish Butter!
Yes, non-Amish can go to Amish church. They will probably ignore you though.
Old order Amish are stricter than new order Amish. There are now even new new order Amish which are not as strict as new order Amish.
Doyle Yoder has written: 'Amish country 1993' 'America's Amish country' -- subject(s): Amish, Pictorial works, Social life and customs 'Amish country 1994' 'Amish Country 2007' 'Amish country 1992' 'Amish country 1995'
Amish was created in 1693.
The answer is not that simple. I have been with many different Amish Women. Some of them wore a type of home sewn tight t-shirt type under garment, and others just let their melons flap freely in the breeze. But my favorite is the one Amish lady I was with who wore a tight spandex body suit under her Amish clothing. She had several body piercings and was the wildest ride I have ever had. She just used her plain outer Amish "shell" to conceal the crazy nympho that lurked underneath.
i have an original and a trophy. edward was my grandfather. I have a 1929 newspaper photograph of the stanczak brothers..would you like to have a copy of your grandfather..let me know..