In my previous article, I remarked upon how the artifacts in the resurrection image i made resembled those on the Turin Shroud.

If you look at the above two images, you will perhaps be able to see the marks: quite obviously on my image – the blue/white marks to the right; and on the Turin Shroud (post feature image), roughly triangular marks which are perhaps similar. Other Shroud pictures depict these patches more distinctly, but I am using one of the free-to-use Shroud images here.
To clear up, it seems that these patches are not in fact artifacts created at the point of the orginal Shroud creation, but are in fact later artifacts caused by a fire. The fire occured in 1532 in Chambéry Castle, and molten silver burned holes in the shroud. Poor Clare nuns later formed a repair job, sewing patches over the holes.
So in terms of the Resurrection image, I would now say the light artifacts are less allusory to the Shroud, as there were no damage artifacts originally on the Shroud.
Just wanted to clear that up!
Still, the artifacts are still special to me, representing late damage to the negative which is aestheticaly pleasing, showing the fragility and beauty of a light burned image.