By Vurdlak on June 12, 2006, with 107 Comments
Title says it all. Help me “see this one” – if you look at the image from sides, narrow your eyes, or simply step away from your monitor, silhouette of a famous person wil appear. I’m just not sure if it’s Benjamin Franklin or George Washington or someone third… Previously I posted simmilar illusion of Einstein which can be found in Celebreties Category, along with other simmilar ones posted at the bottom of the Spot The Object Category.







(13 votes)
it’s Bach! duh!!
Is George Washingtong
I don’t see any famous people.
Benjamin Washington –or– George Franklin?
It looks like that fat actor who played Oscar Wilde.
its the mona lisa
omg quaker oats guy!!
its a mutant baby
looks like a dog in a hoodie.
It can be anybody from the nineteenth centuries
Americans tend to see the president
(and also because the title says so)
and really, people, learn ur history
in Shakespeare’s and Bach’s time they didn’t have lace collars!
and yeah, it does look a lil bit like the Quaker Oats guy
Lace was around since the 15th century, and so even if they weren’t common until later, lace collars could have been around since then. And even so, it’s art. It doesn’t necessarily have to be realistic. And The nineteenth century sounds a little late to me.
it is geoorge washington
Little Old Ladt
i see a small little fat man with buck teeth and poodle hair…
I see George washintons face but with ben franklins hair!!!!! WIERD!!!!
i think its George
Another vote for Cotton Mather.
Bach.
looks like cuck norris
Iif u gonna sayy Chuck Norris @least spell.his.name rite
Idiot
George Washington
Ben Franklin
This is Edward Jenner, the creator of the first inoculation against smallpox (using the cowpox bacillus). EXACT Photo at http://media-2.web.britannica.com/eb-media/70/10070-004-197FAC5C.jpg
And from Wikipedia –
Edward Anthony Jenner (17 May 1749 – 26 January 1823) was an English scientist who studied his natural surroundings in Berkeley, Gloucestershire. Jenner is widely credited as the pioneer of smallpox vaccine, and is sometimes referred to as the “Father of Immunology”; his works have been said to have “saved more lives than the work of any other man”.
its gaddafi
no one else commented. that’s so sad.
It’s John Baptiste De La Salle.
The collar is distinctive: 17th to early 18th century protestant clerics wore this.
John Wesley-type, but not him. Cotton Mather, perhaps, or John Cotton.