At first, it looks like nothing. Then a neck. Then a beak pointing outward. A goose, shaped by negative space and subtle lines, floating between sky and stone. It only appears when you change how you look, not where you look.

Training your eye to see more

Hidden images like this are not about eyesight. They are about patience. Artists often hide figures where contrast is low and patterns repeat. Shadows are especially powerful. So are areas we assume are unimportant, like empty sky or background rock.

The trick is to slow down, stop naming objects, and simply observe shapes and edges. Once you do that, the image opens up in a completely new way.

And that moment, when the hidden suddenly becomes obvious, is exactly why we love puzzles like this.