All the photos feature candid shots of family members, friends, and children in Halloween garb in the US. Here, a man with a handmade cowboy mask holds a young girl.
"These are pictures of the dead," author Geoff Cox wrote in Haunted Air. "Torn from album pages, sold piecemeal for pennies and scattered, abandoned to melancholy chance and the hands of strangers."
As you can see, masks were prevalent in earlier costumes.
While we might recognize a draped white blanket as a basic ghost costume, earlier ghost costumes, such as the one worn by the child here, featured terrifying handmade masks.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdOther masks looked even more grotesque.
For some trick-or-treaters, slightly ill-fitting costumes and mangled masks were good enough for a costume.
Others simply exaggerated facial features.
Clowns, unsurprisingly, were also terrifying back then.
Many of the costumes looked imperfect because manufacturing processes hadn't been refined. Plus, many of them were handmade — mass-manufacturing of costumes didn't start until the 1920s.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip Ad"The perishing of fabrics and the rotting of early rubber, due to chemical instabilities and damp conditions, create new and sinister, puzzling abnormalities," Brown wrote of the costumes.
Some of the photos have noticeable aberrations on them, giving them a gritty, spooky feel. Film isn't a perfectly stable medium, after all.
"I'm excited by pictures where I can see a natural mutation has occurred," Brown wrote. "Not just in the condition of the photograph, with mold spots and tears creating new and unimagined landscapes, but also from the passing down and inheritance of a costume, perhaps over many years."
As terrifying as the future can be sometimes, the past can oftentimes match it.