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Inside the Oregon Vortex: The strange phenomenon that defies gravity and baffles visitors | Bartell's Backroads
Hidden beneath a canopy of oak trees in Southern Oregon lies a place where gravity seems to lose its grip, perspective plays tricks on your eyes and the laws of physics appear to bend. Known as the ...
On June 1, the Museum of Illusions will open a location in the May Co. building, adjacent to Public Square, in downtown Cleveland. The 9,200 square feet of exhibit space at 186 Euclid Ave. will be a ...
Consider our mind thoroughly tricked. Even before we step onto the platform to walk through the Vortex Tunnel at the new Museum of Illusions Cleveland, the spinning imagery on the walls enveloping us ...
The Museum of Illusions, a 10-year-old Croatia-born company with locations in 26 countries, has opened its 61st location in San Diego’s Gaslamp Quarter. The 10,000-square-foot museum, located in the ...
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3 Buildings in Oregon That Are Unlike Anything Else Around
What comes to mind when you think of the strangest buildings in Oregon? From mind-bending roadside attractions to office buildings that look like they belong in a Wes Anderson movie, the Beaver State ...
A new attraction on the Third Street Promenade is turning heads — and perspectives — as the Museum of Illusions officially opens its doors in Santa Monica. The immersive space spans 12,000 square feet ...
The Museum of Illusions walk-in kaleidoscope. An illusion is defined as a thing that is or is likely to be wrongly perceived or interpreted by the senses. Pittsburgh’s newly opened Museum of Illusions ...
Part of a fast-growing global chain of privately held (i.e. for-profit) museums, the Seattle MOI is one of nearly 50 Museums of Illusions worldwide. It is the chain’s first U.S. West Coast location, ...
To continue reading this content, please enable JavaScript in your browser settings and refresh this page. Preview this article 1 min In this roundup of Valley M&A ...
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22 mind-boggling optical illusions
Optical illusions are older than you think. The first optical illusions date back to 20,000 BC and took the form of cave sculptings. Nowadays they are found all over the place – on screens, in books ...
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