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Welcome to a world where reality transforms into a vibrant stage of facial expressions and intriguing characters. In the course of my daily life, I stumbled upon a hidden treasure: pareidolias that have made me smile, ponder, and sometimes even burst into laughter.

I am delighted to share with you approximately 36 encounters with these faces and shapes concealed in the most unexpected places.

Through this series, I invite you to dive into a realm of spontaneous creativity, where a simple tool or vegetable becomes a character with a story to tell, where an everyday object suddenly comes to life with a remarkable expression. These pareidolias, captured at the precise moment they emerged, reflect the magic that can arise when our imagination interacts with the world around us.

More info: Instagram

My name is Boris Blanchoz. I'm 45 years old, French, and I live in Grenoble in the French Alps, not far from Switzerland and Italy.

I'm a social worker, and I work with people who are losing their autonomy. In my job, I strive to ensure that these individuals can continue to have access to culture and socialization despite their physical or cognitive difficulties. My professional skills make me a "jack of all trades." I take these people on museum visits, culinary workshops, discussion groups, intergenerational and intercultural meetings, computer courses, reading workshops, memory workshops, and more.

#2

Tweed Duck

An image of an object that looks like it's surprised

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Pancake_Pansexual_Panda
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Today I learned a new species of duck: The tweed duck! Watch it quack and raise it's own baby tweed ducklings...

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#3

Chronological Gloom

An image of an object that looks like it's sad

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Margaret H
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

He just realised his time is running out and he has been superseded by a digital model.

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For as long as I can remember, I've always paid attention to details: on objects, in landscapes, in the gestures, reactions, and non-verbal communication of the people around me, in films, etc. Details always speak volumes and tell me a lot. So it's natural for me to seek out and find these faces.

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I'm neither a photographer nor an "artist." I wasn't a big fan of social networks, and yet one day, for no particular reason, I photographed one of these faces with my phone, created an Instagram account, and posted it. I quickly found an audience, which motivated me and gave me the desire to continue immortalizing them and compiling them on my @boris.sees.faces page. I'm not looking for quantity; I only post the ones I find "lively" and expressive.

The majority of these pareidolies come from discoveries I've made on my urban walks around the city. I've never really tried to "hunt" for faces; I've sometimes wandered around specifically to find them, but the majority I find when I'm not looking for them... I really think I find them when I look at objects in a certain way.

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For many of these pareidolias, I can no longer see anything but the faces; I notice the faces before I see the object they're supposed to be.

These are exclusively smartphone photos that I edit using my phone's applications to make them stand out a little more.

For some time now, I've also been writing short texts, mostly in the form of poems, to accompany the photos. Often metaphorical, these poems are there to breathe even more life into these objects and provoke both philosophical reflections and smiles.

I have a few favorite pareidolias, but I'm eternally indecisive, so it's hard to choose. What I like most is that they have full expressions strong enough to convey feelings that could be our own, like the one I call "mechanical stupefaction," which appears flabbergasted, or the big toothy grin of the "movie star smile."

I also love the weathering and wearing away of pareidolia by rust, for example. Like humans, the passage of time gives them distinct characters and personalities.

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Additionally, I appreciate "natural" pareidolia from trees, fruit, or stones just as much as those from objects created by humans, as long as they're the result of a certain amount of chance... otherwise, they're no longer pareidolias.

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#17

Smiling Crushed Ghost

An image of an object that looks like it's smiling

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#18

Lunar Tiredness

An image of an object that looks like it's surprised

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#27

Like A Piece Of Dysney Furniture

An image of an object that looks like it's surprised or scared

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#30

Double Glazing Simple Cracking

An image of an object that looks like it's surprised

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