This is one of the rare, old-timer optical illusions. It was taken from a german/french magazine that shows a vintage painting of two funny men. Eventhough they both look like the fatter guy from Laurel and Hardy (don't remember which one is fat, and which one is thin), artists named them David and Goliath. The thing is that the blond guy (David) looks smaller and weaker then the left one (Goliath). Why is that? You guessed... becase this is another optical illusion... Another thing, if you can read the text and speak german/french please translate this and post it under comments. Thanks!

Edit: Donald Huggan, a professional translator, translated this text from Dutch to English, so be sure to email him if you have simmilar jobs for him. The original translated text follows:

"When you lay the figures next to each other in the same direction it appears that the one in front is bigger. Both are really the same size. Cut out these figures."




16 Comments

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  1. Anonymous Pierre 

    Top translation:


    If you place these figures side by side, it would seem that the left figure is bigger although they are of the same size.

    Bottom translation:

    Cut-up these figures
    turn please

  2. Anonymous Michael Cook 

    Here is what Google language tools makes of it, after I cleaned it up with my old middle school french understanding:

    "Place the two figures one to the side of the other. It seems that the first is larger, but they are of a same size."

    About what you would expect.

  3. Anonymous Joost 

    The left part is written in Dutch, not German. Which would make this a perfect article for a Belgian magazine.

    Love your site.

  4. Anonymous Schorki 

    It's dutch, by the way, not german. :)

  5. Anonymous dru 

    it's not german on the left, it's like, dutch i think.

  6. Anonymous Johan 

    The first text is Dutch.

  7. Anonymous Ronald 

    Err... the left text isn't german. For me, living in germany near the dutch frontier, it looks like dutch. French is one official language in belgium, so maybe that's belgian.

    The german translation of the left text would be 'Man legt die beiden Figuren in gleicher Richtung nebeneinander, wodurch es den Anschein macht daß die vordere immer die größere ist. Beide sind aber gleich groß.'

    So it says, that if you place the two figures next to each other, it still looks as if the left one ('the foremost') looks bigger. Regardless if it's David or Goliath.

  8. Anonymous Rootman 

    BTW - it was Oliver Hardy that was the fat one - a quick search on something called the internet would of told you that :)

  9. Anonymous DuTcH 

    Lol no it's not german it's dutch

  10. Anonymous Anonymous 

    the left text isn't dutch it's vlaams thats the language they speak in belgian.

  11. Anonymous Anonymous 

    LOL ITS DUTCH NOT GERMAN SPAM SPAM

  12. Anonymous Elliexx ANIMALS ROCK!! 

    its quite funny coz loads of people have commented on the language - rather than the illusion. (it is Dutch though! hehe! they made a mistake!)
    quite good illusion.

  13. Blogger David 

    It's not a german/french magazine! It's a dutch/french magazine! (Yes, dutch and german are very different languages, just like French, Spanish and Italian are different altough they have the same source)
    The translation is:
    One lays both figures down next to each other with the face in the same direction, (untranslatable in modern English, free translation:) because of this the first seems to be bigger than the other. Both are of almost the same size.

  14. Anonymous Neat-Nit 

    David and Goliath are from the jewish bible if anyone wants to know and didn't. David somehow beat the giant Goliath and they made him the king. There is even a song about that story.

  15. Anonymous Lee 

    Its the Tucks.....that make the illusion......the pictures are the same size....1st Tucks is larger and it gives a more bigger look

  16. Anonymous Crawf 

    I know this is an old illusion, but I just wanted to say that the Lee's comment about it being the Tuxedo's that make the illusion is wrong.

    Copying the picture into paint & playing with it reveals that not only are the two men the same size, but the Tuxedo's have nothing to do with the illusion




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