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Type of bind: Hardcover
Dewey Decimal Number: 760
EAN num: 9780836270068
Format: Illustrated
ISBN number: 0836270061
Label: Andrews and McMeel Publishing
Manufacturer: Andrews and McMeel Publishing
Quantity: 1
Page Count: 32
Printing Date: October 01, 1993
Publishing house: Andrews and McMeel Publishing
Sale Popularity Level: 13622
Studio: Andrews and McMeel Publishing
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Product Description:
People worldwide are adding another dimension to their lives: the third dimension! Thanks to the 3D wonder of Magic Eye, people of all ages find themselves spellbound by the hidden images that suddenly are leaping from book pages, greeting cards, calendars, even T-shirts and mugs.
This colorful Magic Eye book guides gazers through 23 different 3D, computer-generated illustrations. Complete instructions, including two detailed viewing techniques, will have them searching for visual surprises through beautifully executed, full-page designs. Expand your Magic Eye vision and watch the wonderful happen!
User popularity level:

Rated by buyers
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My grandchildren have just discovered this wonderful way of "looking at the world." They keep looking at my collection of magic eye books over and over again without tiring of them. I understand that it is a good exercise too. I will be keeping my collection to pass on to the subsequent generation :-)
Rated by buyers
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I really love these books. I am fascinated by the technique used to get the 3-d affect. I have everyone out.
Rated by buyers
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Images with an embedded three-dimensional image fascinate me. For a long time, I was unable to discern the interior image, but when I was finally able to do so, I was hooked. This collection of 22 images kept me busy for several hours as I went stared at each page until the image appeared. When you look at these pages from a distance, the colors appear to be ordered, but not structured. It is only when you look at it the right way that the true image appears. If you enjoy figures with embedded three-dimensional images, then this is a book that you will appreciate.
Rated by buyers
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Yep, the very first time those seemingly random sqiggles of colour in Magic Eye leap into formation and you're staring down at an object under all that chaotic visual mess...it's a magic moment for sure. These books are a lot of fun and worth the effort it takes to get the knack of how to do it. It took me a few tries before I saw anything here, so if at very first you don't succeed, stay with it because it's worth it.
Rated by buyers
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If humans were truly telepathic, there would be little need to explore the ruminations of impressions that identify and create the discourse that produces harmony, vision, and processes that enable man to live together. What we think we see in another's actions is often unrelated to their actual thinking, and hence, the value of interaction is of great importance to humans. By having multiple options of movement, to be influenced by impressions, experiences, and by learning means that the quality and quantity of interactions always carries different meanings to different people, being measured or scrutinized by subjective means as they always are. Therefore, contextual science is inherent in achieving progress, the slow laborious process of acquiring common ground of meaning, objective, and resolution in any interaction, however brief. Since that requires a good bit of reading people's behavior, and processing intent, from the perspective of the "other" external to oneself, conjecture and breath of conjecture provides ample opportunity for sucess or mistake. The chipping away process of illusions to reach the depth of meaning and significance is a large part of what makes the content of human life. As if the graph existed that placed everyone upon a spectrum of spacial plots, some would be expected to be closer than others, which may or may not reflect the ideal, but may be more related to any given point in time, and attention.
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