A strange photo of oiled legs has circulated online, which is actually a great optical illusion. Check it out and tell us what you see.
an optical illusion
Optical illusions break the laws of nature, and at the same time they are also meant for entertainment. Who would have thought that they could help you discover new diseases. Yes, you read that right!
An American artist has turned an abandoned shed in the middle of the Californian desert in the Joshua Tree National Forest into an incredible optical illusion called Lucid Stead.
We are usually bombarded by photos with optical illusions, and the "freerunners" Jason Paul and Pasha Petkuns played with them in their interesting video, where they defy gravity and perform tricks that seem to defy all logic. The world turned upside down. Literally!
The Internet is shaking its head with a new optical illusion. There are six girls in this photo, but can we count only five pairs of legs? Where are the legs of the girl in the middle holding the glass? Let us give you a hint that the girl definitely has both legs.
One of the first things that comes to mind when we think of multi-ethnic and hilly San Francisco, along with the Golden Gate Bridge, streetcars and Chinatown, are steep streets. And the very steep streets were used by Karen X. Cheng and Ross Ching to perform gravity illusions, as they flattened the roads with the camera.
Do you love enigmas, mysteries and things that are really, really hard to figure out? Here are optical illusions that will make you think.
The Japanese brand Sun-star presents a collection of Fakus pens that create an incredible optical illusion. They deceptively appear as if they are three-dimensional, although it is actually a flat design. Together with the colorful palette, they represent an interesting approach that encourages viewing these playful products at least twice.
Don't believe everything you see. We present to you incredible 3D illusions with drawings signed by the artist Howard Lee, which will trick you. One of the objects is real, while the other is "merely" a 3D drawing. Guess which one is which?
You know when a girl accuses a guy of looking at other women? Well, just watching doesn't hurt, does it? Well, it might cost him a slap or a bond, but it certainly doesn't hurt his vision. But there are things that can seriously harm you just by looking at them long enough. Okay, let's leave the sun and the flash for welding. These are the images behind the phenomenon called the McCollough effect, which can distort your vision. Distortion of vision can last for an hour or as long as three months! And as Tom Scott says, telling someone on the internet not to do that is like telling a five-year-old not to stuff beans up their nose. So, don't try the McCollough effect!
The web is divided. Is this photo Bill Murray or Tom Hanks? Which famous actor imitates a crying baby? Can you guess?
Believe it or not, there are 12 black dots in this picture, arranged in three rows, but no one can see more than two at a time. Do you manage to see them? It is a new online phenomenon that is confusing thousands of internet users.