There are seven differences between these two pictures. See if you can find them.
There are seven differences between these two pictures. See if you can find them.
This entry was posted on Thursday, August 6th, 2020 at 11:17 am and is filed under simple pleasures. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.
People who hate cats will come back as mice in their next life.
—Faith Resnick
I don’t always go the extra mile, but when I do, it’s because I missed my exit.
Home sweet home
Bob's sister Hannah
Bob's sister Ada
Bob's brother Otto
Bob's sister Eve
Bob's sister Nan
A baby picture of Bob and his siblings (clockwise from upper left: Otto, Eve, Hannah, Ada, Bob, and Nan)
Bob's childhood home
Bob's mom and dad
Bob in his youth
Bob's cousin Alphonse
Bob's Uncle Ralph and Aunt Edna
Bob's cousin Archibald
Bob's stepbrother Herbie (who really needs to quit smoking)
Bob's cousin Chester
Bob's Great Uncle Norbert and Great Aunt Phyllis
Bob's cousin Saffron (who will do anything for a drink)
Bob's cousin Thorndike
Bob's brother-in-law Vinnie
Bob's cousin Orville, who loves the Green Bay Packers
Bob's nieces Lulu and Bitsy, the biker chicks
Bob's stepsister Eloise, with the twins, Rudy and Trudy
Bob's Uncle Henry and Aunt Rowena
Bob's niece Esmerelda (who likes to live dangerously)
Bob's Great Uncle Arthur up in Saskatchewan
Bob's cousin Louie, the grackle of grumpiness
Miss Screech, Bob's journalism teacher
Bob's nephew Winthrop, who loves sports
Bob's Uncle Seymour and Aunt Bernice
Bob's second cousin Schlomo in Brooklyn
Bob's nephew Baxter
Bob's cousin Darrell
Bob's sister-in-law Delphine, who volunteers at the animal shelter
Percy the Pickpocket, Bob's third cousin once removed (the relative no one likes to talk about... every family has one)
The Bluebird of Happiness™ (no relation to Bob)
A pair of boobies (also no relation to Bob, but included for readers who desire titillation)
Bluebird Bitter™, the beer they named for Bob
That was difficult, but I found all seven. Now I have a headache and eye strain, but I’ll recover. 🙂
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For the benefit of readers who couldn’t find them all, here is the solution.

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Oh, I remember these “find the differences” things from my yout’.
And looking at this I remember why I hated them. This is too much like homework!
Sure, there’s always a few that pop right out at you, like the emblems on a sand castle flag or a suntan lotion label.
Then there’s the trickier ones, like seeds on a watermelon slice or a different arrangement of colors on an ice cream cone.
Simple changes can be so annoyingly hard to find, like a missing hatband. Or a color difference, an orange instead of an apple.
But then there’s always that last one, that hardest one, the one for which you have to search and search, until your eyes are darting back and forth unbidden.
Finally it’s obvious: The bear on the blanket reading is on a different page. Yay. I was afraid it was going to be something really dumb like one of the sand dollars turned oppositely
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I found four. Can I stop now? 😉
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You’re excused. 🙂
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Thank you ❤❤
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p.s. I posted the solution above, in response to the comment from jono51.
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You beat me: I found only three!
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I had almost given up when I found the fourth one. 😃
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I made three. 🙂
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It was a challenging puzzle. I posted the solution above. 🙂
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1) sand castle flag
2) pump bottle label
3) Neapolitan ice cream on a stick, different sequence of layers
4) Orange vs. apple
5) Hatband
6) Watermelon seeds
7) Not gonna tells ya. No, mindful webworker, it’s NOT the bear on the blanket. The bear is on the same page. Embiggen it.
This problem is “easily” solved IF you take both images, line them up, and rapidly switch between the images. Astronomers use this comparison technique, called the “blink test”, to find comets and planets (like Pluto!) – the differences will “flash” at you. All higher forms of life use this “scene change” to detect motion to either get food or keep from becoming food. Nowadays in the astronomy field this is an automated process. Ain’t computers great?!?
And, yes, I had to embiggen it to see it clearly. Old age ain’t for wusses…
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“Old age ain’t for wusses…” I’ll hit 79 next month (9/9), and I tell younger folks, “Old age hurts – don’t do it!” ‘Course, they’ll live to 100, just to prove me wrong – good on ’em!
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😀 😀 😀
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This was hard, but fun!
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I have an exactly-even love-hate relationship with these!
Thanks for the solution. I’d been failing at convincing myself that I didn’t HAVE TO solve it!
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