The image itself shows a skirt with what appears to be a couple of obvious tears or openings in the fabric. At first glance, the answer seems obvious. You see two tears, so you say two holes. Simple enough.
But then something happens. You start to think a little more carefully.
You realize that a tear in fabric does not just go through one layer. If the skirt is made of front and back panels, then each visible tear actually passes through both sides of the material. That changes the count immediately.
Suddenly two holes might actually be four.
And once your mind starts down that road, there is almost no stopping it. What about the opening at the top of the skirt, where you step into it? Does that count as a hole? What about the opening at the bottom hem, where your legs come out?
If those count, you are now looking at six.
And wait — are there small drawstring openings near the waistband? Some viewers say yes. Add those in and the number climbs even higher.
This is what makes the puzzle so effective. It starts as a simple observation test and slowly transforms into a genuine logic exercise. The image does not change. Your perception of it does.
Why Visual Puzzles Like This Are So Good for the Mind
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