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5 mga litrato That Divided The Internet

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It’s not everyday the internet joins together on a vision quest, but some photos have the power to spark an internet debate. It’s because of how people perceive things - especially color - differently.
© Joe Giddens-AP The two-tone dress, left, alongside an ivory and black version, made by Roman Originals, that has sparked a global debate on Twitter over what colour it is on display in Birmingham, England on February 27, 2015.
Case in point: People are still talking about the instant viral phenomenon that’s now known as "the dress." The infamous question of whether the polarizing striped frock was blue and black or white and gold garnered millions of hits and spurred passionate social media clashes. Now a study published in April by the
basically concluded that our different takes all boil down to one thing: the way each individual perceives the way light illuminated the dress differently.
While a new photo hasn’t reached the dress’s fame levels, here are five pictures that got the internet’s eyes popping.
My house is divided over this dress. #whiteandgold pic.twitter.com/DcHay027Rg
In February of 2015, Scottish musician Caitlin McNeill posted a photo of a washed out dress and a simple question: "Is this dress white and gold or blue and black?"
BuzzFeed staffer Cates Holderness put the user’s original query online with a poll that prompted the citizens of the internet to lose its collective mind because each person was 100% certain of the dress’s true colors.
Laura R. of Scotland originally submitted the photo in question to the parenting blog "Reasons My Son Is Crying" back in May 2013. The puzzling snapshot resurfaced in October 2016 and immediately divided the internet into two camps: some thought it was America’s dad Tom Hanks, while others were convinced it was the elusive comedian Bill Murray.
are these legs shiny and oily or are they legs with white paint on them pic.twitter.com/7Z8e8F1JCZ
When Hunter Culverhouse posted a photo of legs to Instagram, the snapshot confused thousands on the internet. Some thought her limbs were splashed with white paint, and others saw very glossy, shiny legs.
When Taylor Corso from Mississippi shared a photo of her newly purchased Kate Spade handbag on Twitter in October 2016, the photo sparked a raging Twitter storm. Some were certain the handbag was blue and others saw it as white.
More dissent on the color front. When Arthur Luppi De Nardi tweeted a shot of a pair of Havianas flip flops and asked "what do you see?" in Portuguese, the sandals got the freakout machine whirring again.
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<strong>Optical illusions</strong> have fascinated both young and old for centuries. These illusions are produced when our eyes (and our brains) have difficulty interpreting reality. There are two distinct types of illusions: errors of assessment occur when we interpret an image incorrectly, whereas visual paradoxes cause us to question the real appearance of the image.</p><p>Some iconic, others more obscure, these <strong>drawings</strong> and illustrations will give your brain a good workout. Whether you prefer a trompe l’oeil or hidden figures, there’s an illusion for everyone!</p>" height="225" src="//img-s-msn-com.akamaized.net/tenant/amp/entityid/AAooqIl.img?h=225&w=300&m=6&q=60&o=f&l=f&x=803&y=685" width="300" /> Optical illusions: Can you master them all?
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You can look at a <a href="http://www.pellecass.com">Pelle Cass</a> photo for several moments before realizing it doesn't make sense.</p><p> See if you can spot what's going on in this picture of people walking down the stairs:</p><p> Figured it out? </p><p> "Each person's foot is hovering an inch or so above the next step," Cass says by email. "The odds that 19 strangers would be caught at the same crucial instant in the same instantaneous photograph just before landing on the next step must be astronomically small."</p><p> How does Cass do it? Calling himself a subversive trick photographer, the Boston artist takes hundreds of photos on a tripod in a single spot over about an hour. He then goes back to his studio and carefully selects content to include in a composite image.</p><p> "I don't change a thing and I never move a figure or doctor a single Pixel," <a href="http://thecreatorsproject.vice.com/blog/Video-pelle-cass-time-lapse-photography-explores-the-interconnectedness-of-daily-life"> he explains</a>. "I simply decide what stays in and what's left out."</p><p> Photos in "Selected People" can show a perfect spectrum of colors, a collection of people raising their arms, or simply an arrangement the artist finds striking.</p><p> "I never pass up the chance to make a joke, visual or otherwise," he adds.</p><p> Cass shared a set of photos from "Selected People," including a few never seen before. See if you can spot what's wrong.</p>" height="72" src="//img-s-msn-com.akamaized.net/tenant/amp/entityid/AAj4PeS.img?h=72&w=96&m=6&q=60&u=t&o=t&l=f&x=54&y=312" title="You can look at a Pelle Cass photo for several moments before realizing it doesn't make sense. See i... - Pelle Cass, "Selected People"" width="96" />
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