I was sure the extra area was getting soaked up in the frame by tiny slices, so it goes from a wee bit loose to tight as you add more tiles. I was wrong. As piece three moves farther right, the vertical dimension increases way too much for that. It's sleight of hand. If you've seen your friend do it, it means your friend is just that good.
Well, I never see #1 leave the image frame. It always fits the cardboard frame. I put blue tape on my screen and marked it, all three same size. I say real.
The frames are being switched out. There aren't many points on the background to compare but there are a few. The reframed puzzle is larger than the previous puzzle using those background marks as a reference. When the frame leaves the picture, you're getting rolled.
Not fake in any way. Take careful note, before the extra piece is added, there are a lot of small gaps all over. The frame doesn't fit tightly. When the extra piece is added, everything fits tightly. The trick comes in where your brain doesn't consider the little gaps to be significant, but the area of all the little gaps combined is the same as the area of the final piece.
#1 show us how stupid you are without saying anything #4 still amazes me that in a big parking lot some fool will always find a pole to crash into #10 reminds me of my boss trying to get me to do any work a month before i retired
#4 - Bat Drill! When my kids were in Little League I pulled this trick on them with a baseball bat. Put your forehead on the lower end of the bat, put the bat straight down to the ground, spin around about five times. Race to the other end of the yard. Watch them waddle into the fence. Hilarity ensues.
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#5 - watch closely and you can see when the frame goes completely off camera twice so it can be swapped for bigger ones.
ReplyDeleteI'm sorry, but I've seen that puzzle done in real life by a friend of mine.
DeleteMy brain hurts
DeleteI'm still waiting him to turn it over and go for # 8
DeleteRight. Slight of hand using two different frames. The width stays the same, but the height differs.
DeleteI was sure the extra area was getting soaked up in the frame by tiny slices, so it goes from a wee bit loose to tight as you add more tiles. I was wrong. As piece three moves farther right, the vertical dimension increases way too much for that. It's sleight of hand. If you've seen your friend do it, it means your friend is just that good.
DeleteWell, I never see #1 leave the image frame. It always fits the cardboard frame. I put blue tape on my screen and marked it, all three same size. I say real.
DeleteLet me go find my Post-It notes...
DeleteThe frames are being switched out. There aren't many points on the background to compare but there are a few. The reframed puzzle is larger than the previous puzzle using those background marks as a reference.
DeleteWhen the frame leaves the picture, you're getting rolled.
Not fake in any way. Take careful note, before the extra piece is added, there are a lot of small gaps all over. The frame doesn't fit tightly. When the extra piece is added, everything fits tightly. The trick comes in where your brain doesn't consider the little gaps to be significant, but the area of all the little gaps combined is the same as the area of the final piece.
Delete#3 Does the gator's vest have "emotional support animal" printed on it?
ReplyDeleteAl_in_Ottawa
# 3. Gator, it's what's for dinner
ReplyDelete# 7 If it's a family portrait everyone has to be there
# 9 Fluffy but cute
JD
Croc St. Jaques!
Delete#1 show us how stupid you are without saying anything
ReplyDelete#4 still amazes me that in a big parking lot some fool will always find a pole to crash into
#10 reminds me of my boss trying to get me to do any work a month before i retired
#3 Key Lime Pie! That is the story of this video, as bringing in a pet gator is a standard occurrence for a Floridian...
ReplyDelete#10 Every team I have ever worked with. No, I am not that guy.
ReplyDelete#10 This is how most of my days go...
ReplyDelete#5 that's really cool I watched it a couple times.
ReplyDelete#4 - Bat Drill! When my kids were in Little League I pulled this trick on them with a baseball bat. Put your forehead on the lower end of the bat, put the bat straight down to the ground, spin around about five times. Race to the other end of the yard. Watch them waddle into the fence. Hilarity ensues.
ReplyDelete#6 saved from the buffet.
ReplyDeletewow, #5
ReplyDeleteI'd be so psyched to own the clock in #7, but I gotta admit I'd forget to wind it.
ReplyDelete