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Nov11

Horse Silhouette Optical Illusion

by admin on November 11, 2012 at 7:50 am
Posted In: News

Hehe, somehow I just knew you wouldn’t be happy with my previously Hidden Manatees. Still, it’s a regular illusion, and you can’t deny it! Here and then I “have to” post these, since we have new visitors each day, and we wouldn’t want to disappoint them, would we? In the mean time, I’m posting this horse silhouette – I just can’t decide whether the horse is looking in my direction, or towards the horizon? This is the common problem with silhouette images. In a principle they all work in a same way as Spinning Girl and Spinning Man do.

Horse Silhouette Optical Illusion

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Nov11

Some “Optical Illusion” Comics

by admin on November 11, 2012 at 7:49 am
Posted In: News

Some Optical Illusion ComicsSo, nothing new happening here – just another “study my ass of” Saturday. Hope I finally manage to graduate my university this semester. About yesterday’s post, I’m still not definitely sure in which direction the horse is looking at, but I have noticed another peculiar detail – If you think hard, you’ll be able to see his front legs switch. The left one becomes his right foot, and right foot becomes his left. Another thing I have to admit: in the intro above, I wasn’t completely telling the truth. I wrote this post on Friday, and set it to auto publish on Saturday (today). The reason is my overfilled schedule in following days. Well, maybe the Saturday wasn’t so usual after all, I just don’t know it yet! Enjoy these few funny comics I managed to collect over past years. They all have something in common, and guess what – optical illusions. I just haven’t figured the last one yet (the one with glasses). Any luck over there?

Some Optical Illusion Comics
Some Optical Illusion Comics
Some Optical Illusion Comics

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Nov11

Pittsburgh Zoo Optical Illusion

by admin on November 11, 2012 at 7:48 am
Posted In: News

Bob Guckert from Pittsburgh (USA) emailed one of his discoveries. It’s a logo for the Pittsburgh Zoo. Apparently, he found out that the logo holds an interesting optical illusion. He knew of this picture for sometime, but only after visiting our website, he started to see things differently. This is what Bob wrote in his email: “This is an optical illusion I have seen for many years, but didn’t notice till I started visiting your website. Thanks for making me aware of my surroundings”. If you remember, Mira foundation had a similar poster for it’s own campaign. Illusion works same way Rubin’s Vase works, and all other similar illusions we posted earlier, are just a variation of the same principle. So, can you spot the illusion hidden in the poster below? It’s easy!

Pittsburgh Zoo Optical Illusion

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Nov11

Strange False Head Optical Illusion

by admin on November 11, 2012 at 7:47 am
Posted In: News

Roger Smith watches your RSS feed daily. However, he hasn’t been doing it for too long, so wasn’t completely sure if we may had this one already. Fortunately we haven’t. If you look a the vintage photo below, at first it seems to be a simple couple with a large head floating between them. But things aren’t always what they seem. Most people will probably just see a large bearded head between the two figurines. It looks like some sort of Jesus head. But look again, carefully this time. What the photo actually shows, is a CHILD SITTING on the man’s knee. If you still don’t see it, block out the “hair” of the illusive head – it is just a collection of the background foliage anyway. The “eye” is actually child’s face (shadowed by a large white bonnet). The “nose” is the sleeve, and the “mustache” is the child’s arm. If you still don’t see it, be patient – It may take awhile to see it.

Strange False Head Optical Illusion

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Nov11

Benedict Radcliffe’s “Wireframe Lamborghini”

by admin on November 11, 2012 at 7:46 am
Posted In: News

What you’re seeing below is not a computer generated drawing, but a full scale wire-frame representation of a Lamborghini Countach. The installation was created by artist named Benedict Radcliffe. Regular visitors may recall similar installation we covered back in March, called “Wireframed Subaru Impreza” by the same artist we cover today. Lamborghini is the latest in a series of wire cars Radcliffe has completed. It’s his most ambitious project so far. Painstakingly crafted from 10 mm steel tubes welded together into that familiar shape we all know and secretly love. Upon close inspection you see fine details in the wheels and the intake gills, even the “Pirelli P7″ letters are worked out. The car is currently on display at the Classic Car Club UK, a genius organization with a collection of cars the members collectively drive.

Benedict Radcliffes Wireframe Lamborghini
Benedict Radcliffes Wireframe Lamborghini
Benedict Radcliffes Wireframe Lamborghini
Benedict Radcliffes Wireframe Lamborghini
Benedict Radcliffes Wireframe Lamborghini
Benedict Radcliffes Wireframe Lamborghini
Benedict Radcliffes Wireframe Lamborghini
Benedict Radcliffes Wireframe Lamborghini
Benedict Radcliffes Wireframe Lamborghini
Benedict Radcliffes Wireframe Lamborghini
Benedict Radcliffes Wireframe Lamborghini
Benedict Radcliffes Wireframe Lamborghini

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