John Lennon Optical Illusion

22 comments

Hey people! Hope you had nice weekend. I was with my girlfriend, and had a mini-vacation past two days. Before I describe today's optical illusion, I'd like to mention offer from our sponsors. From time to time, I have to post these deals, because they help us run the site.They provided us with link where you can earn some extra cash just by filling their surveys. This might be interesting to you I believe. I think you have to be US/UK/Australian visitor to make this work. They need public opinion for some products, and they are willing to pay you up to $80 for answering their surveys. Check when you have spare time. Boca Java also offers 4 bags of free coffee of your choice.

Regarding illusion of the day, here we have what it seems a simple black and white striped block, while theres famous celebrity John Lennon (The Beatles) hiding somewhere inside it. Can you spot him? If not try to move away from our screen. You can also try and squint your eyes to see him. It's really identical to Jesus in vodka cover. If you like these kind of illusions, you can also check Soulwax album cover, as well as our famous test, where you can see if you're color blind.






22 Comments

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  1. Anonymous Anonymous 

    I think you will find that John Lennon was in the Beatles, not the Doors.

    Cheers

  2. Blogger Vurdlak 

    thnks! i fixed it

  3. Blogger Louis 

    can you explain a little bit on that?

  4. Anonymous Anonymous 

    Sweet image. The Beatles rock. I think I'll go listen to them.

  5. Blogger Gaucho 

    How does it work?

  6. Anonymous Anonymous 

    It also help look at is sideways from a distance.. Awesome picture though.

  7. Anonymous Anonymous 

    It is simple..these lines are smaller to see the light parts en larger in the shadow parts.;not much..but enough..

  8. Anonymous Anonymous 

    omg! at first i was like, wtf is this. then i looked from a distance and turned my head a little. wow. really amazing.

  9. Anonymous johnnyboy 7777 

    preaty cool, i agree with omg! WTF is it ( the last commet. but then i looked from the distence! i love it! don't you guys agree?!

  10. Anonymous Elliexx ANIMALS ROCK!! 

    kl illusion. clever

  11. Anonymous Anonymous 

    that is so good!!!! really good! i like !

  12. Blogger Laura 

    stare right in the middle then move back from the screen

  13. Anonymous Anonymous 

    wow thats kool

  14. Anonymous Anonymous 

    i am colorblind. Just mildly though. I have tried every which way other people have suggested. None worked... What did work was when i put my head lower than the screen then moved my head side to side... Cool illusion

  15. Anonymous Anonymous 

    I'm just IMAGINE-ing that I see John in this picture! HAHAHAHA!

  16. Anonymous Jenn <3 

    wow yeah this is pretty sweet

  17. Anonymous AK 

    Thats awesome, how does it work? Just seems like a buncha straight lines. What worked for me was looking at it from about 45 degrees at a distance.

  18. Anonymous Anonymous 

    It's an easy illusion to make. The "white" lines look white but if you magnify them, they contain subtle shades of grey to form the hidden image.

    Very effective though.........

  19. Blogger Masque 

    I asked my teacher of Semiotics of visual rappresentation about how this illusion might work.
    This is the answer:

    I can not say out of hand who first produced this image, but Nicholas Wade will eb able to tell you a good deal about it. For now, I can only say that there are two ways to produces this type of illusion. The first is to produce the image with fine variations in width of the black and white stripes. The image of Lennon would than appear with either distal viewing or peripheral viewing. Another way to produce this image - and it is the way in which this specific image has been created - is to take a low contrast binary image of lennon, and to superimpose a high contrast pattern of stripes over it. With proximal viewing, the stripes dominate perceptual grouping, whereas the lower spatial frequencies dominate for distal viewing (at greater viewing distances, the stripes constitute a higher spatial frequency component, and thus the stripes may tend to 'cancel' one another). The luminance contrast transfer function of the visual system by Campell and Roberts partly accounts for this.


    I think that this page could also be useful to start some research: Gestalt psychology.

  20. Anonymous Anonymous 

    thats cool... you can also see it beter if you move the window back and forth.. not too fast but not too slow... try it

  21. Anonymous jesse 

    thats a cool illusion, i love john SO much...

  22. Anonymous Anonymous 

    This is awesome--I just turned my screen back and voila! I had it. I know that's cheating, but it is still cool. How did the artist make it?

    --Willow, Wednesday, March 12th, 2008 at 9:06 PM




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