The Disappearing Man
and other Vanishing Acts
by Mel Stover in GAMES


Most optical illusions fail to hold our attention for long because the secret of their trickery is generally transparent.   But the remarkable constructions known as "geometrical vanishes" are so confounding that they continue to delight, amaze, and cause people to question their own sense of sight, even after the mechanics of the puzzles have been explained.

A simple example of this type of paradox is "Pencils," which I designed in 1956. When the three pieces making up the picture of 13 pencils are assembled as shown above teft, 7 red pencils and 6 blue pencils are in view.   But when the positions of the two bottom pieces are switched as shown above right, the picture mysteriously becomes one of 6 red and 7 blue pencils.   As is evident from the simplicity of the drawing, no artistic trickery of any kind is involved in the illusion.   The natural (and misleading) question to ask your friends when showing them the puzzle for the first time is, "Which pencil changes color?"











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