Danbooru
Login Posts Comments Notes Artists Tags Pools Wiki Forum More ยป
Search Changes Help
  • |
  • Posts (28) History

    Blacklisted (help)

    • guro
    • scat
    • furry -rating:g
    Disable all Re-enable all

    Recent Changes (all)

    • rotomi
    • afternoon coffee (shining nikki)
    • tategami wolf
    • shinki yuu
    • hana reiko
    • amao ayumu
    • amao miru
    • kozeri ai
    • merpperoni
    • serperior
    • list of tamagotchi
    • 64 de hakken! tamagotchi
    • tamagotchi
    • merpperoni (vtuber)
    • list of touhou gensou eclipse costumes
    • cheryl (pokemon)
    • recliner
    • tamagotchi on
    • eames chair
    • ladis (iris mysteria!)
    • patricia shandy
    • will (iris mysteria!)
    • sharon oliva
    • kulcha azte
    • ashley arvasti

    Options

    • Tag History
    • Post History
    • Wiki History
    • Discussions
    • What Links Here

    open in internet explorer

    Old browsers such as Internet Explorer 8 and earlier had a unique quirk on how they rendered images when they're highlighted. Artists at the time took advantage of that and added "subliminal" images in their art as a bonus for those that use such browsers.

    Explanation of how it works

    The trick works because those legacy versions of Internet Explorer highlight images using a non-transparent grid pattern, which cancels out one of the two images that have been interleaved into one image using the grid pattern. It dosn't work in modern browsers because they tint images, rather than using the grid method.

    Basically, the grid method works like this. Two images are put together like so:

    121212121
    212121212
    121212121
    212121212

    When highlighted, the "1" image is masked by the highlight, thus this is the result:

    #2#2#2#2#
    2#2#2#2#2
    #2#2#2#2#
    2#2#2#2#2
    #2#2#2#2#

    and the second image can then be plainly seen.

    Viewing hidden images without legacy versions of Internet Explorer

    Here is a method of revealing the hidden image using a layer-based image editor like Photoshop or GIMP:

    • Open the image.
    • Create a new black or white layer above the original image. On this new layer, attach a layer mask.
    • Render a 1-pixel black and white checkerboard pattern as the layer mask. This effectively creates an opaque solid color layer where every other pixel is transparent.
    • Nudge the checkerboard layer one pixel at a time to switch between images.

    Consult the documentation or Google instructions on how to use layer masks and render checkerboards in your image editor.

    Posts

    post #1062117
    post #869230
    post #626136
    post #611197
    post #593131
    post #550859
    Terms / Privacy / Upgrade / Contact /