>>Bless you! :-)
>>
>>Clever but I think I know how it's done.
>
>Yeah, it's a question of angle and perspective. Games magazine, from time to time, used to print such photos, but much larger with people standing in impossible enclosures etc. Then they'd show the picture from another angle, and you could see where things are not attached, bars are shortened or lengthened, and such.
>
>But it's still a really neat trick.
Yeah, it looks great. It's different in that it's essentially 2-D, whereas Escher's orig drawing was of a terahedronical area wasn't it.
- Whoever said that women are the weaker sex never tried to wrest the bedclothes off one in the middle of the night
- Worry is the interest you pay, in advance, for a loan that you may never need to take out.