Picture shared by modean987.
Picture shared by kmsThese owls however are not so brilliant...

The picture (above) was widely printed in newspapers throughout the 1930s. It was represented as being a snapshot of Adolf Hitler as a baby. Sometime in 1937 Mrs. Harriet Downs, of Westport, Conn., noticed the image in a magazine and recognized it as an altered baby photo of her own son, John May Warren. The original, unretouched picture is shown on the right. It is not known how the hoaxer obtained the original picture.
LA PAZ, Bolivia (AP) -- President Evo Morales cut his salary in half and declared no Cabinet minister can collect a higher wage than his own, with the savings to be used to hire more public school teachers. Full Story.



It is true that the images formed on your retina are upside-down. It is also true that most people have two eyes, and therefore two retinas. Why, then, don't you see two distinct images? For the same reason that you don't see everything upside-down. One of our most remarkable tools - the brain - is hard at work for us at this task.
Your brain CAN be retrained though. In one psychological study, participants were asked to wear inverting lenses - lenses that invert the image BEFORE they get to your eye, so that when your eye inverts it, it's right-side-up. At first, everything appeared upside-down to the participants. But, after a few days, people began to report that everything appeared right-side-up! As a second part of the study, the people were asked to take the glasses off. Because they were now used to the lenses, their NORMAL vision appeared upside-down!! Link
When you first meet 4-year-old Roberto Salazar, you can't help but notice his unwavering smile and constant laughter. By all accounts, he's a very happy boy.
It is only when he rams his head violently into walls or plays a little too roughly with a schoolmate, all the while smiling, that you are reminded that he suffers from an incredibly rare genetic disorder. Read more.


WRONG! These are real photographs by Olivo Barbieri. Link.
These next pictures are from Flickr:
From top to bottom: pictures by big daddy hame (first two) and digital josh.
Link for some more tilt-shift photography on Flickr
Plus:
More examples here.

And here (with nifty explanation of the lens used).
And here, and here and here, and here, and here, and... well, you get the picture.
via.
PLUS

You can see more of these by Tano here from more vantage points, so you can observe that there is no trickery involved.

The maker of this gorgeous mechanical papercraft dragon has a cool business model: you can download the PDFs necessary to build the automata for free, but if you build it successfully, he asks for a $5 donation. The mechanical motion of this one is amazing, check out the animation. Link (via Paperforest)

First I chose a colourful image. I then horizontally motion blurred it, applied extra contrast and sharpness and ran the "amazing circles" procedure. Next, I copied the result, rotated it through 90 degrees, colour inverted, and applied an overlay layer blend. Lastly I selected the background, feathered, and changed it to black.
Copyright © 2008 Suspension of Disbelief