>>#7, I'm gonna use stars as an example here. When you look at a picture from the Hubble Space Telescope for example, most stars have 6 points, and this is due to the aperture on the telescope being a hexagon. This works with cameras that have square, pentagonal, octagonal, dodecahedronal, and other apertures, having corresponding star-shapes.
This also works with your eyes, where your cornea has its own "star" shape, caused by the joining of the tissues of your cornea as you were forming, even causing your left and right eye to see 2 different "star" shapes.
What is going on in the content, though, is the dude has a pair of glasses with very many imprints across the lens that looks like snowmen. So whenever a light shines thru the glasses, it gets concentrated in a way that looks like the lens it is passing thru: a snowman.
TLR lens shape causes light passing thru it to have a corresponding shape.
Nailed that explanation. You can also cut out any shape out of a light-tight material and attach it to the front of a camera and you could have every light spell out your name.
I don't think so. I can't find anyone claiming its new...I'll check again though if it bothers you that some people might not know about them. If I find one, I'll let you know so you can feel superior to him.
i had a rave going roommate who had glasses that made lights look like stars as if it were a kelidiscope effect. i assume this is the same type of engineering
for those that don't know what the **** it is, it's a thing called bokeh. The light can only go into your eyes in a very specific way, bokeh lens can take regular photos then change because the camera can unfocus on things closest to you, and your eyes try to focus and everything it can at one given moment. giving this effect.