The faces you’ll find here could more accurately be called James Webb Hidden “HALF” Faces. They are made by taking a NASA released image from the James Webb Space Telescope, whether a galaxy, a star cluster, a constellation, or other image, and finding “half of a face” somewhere in the image, cropping that out, mirroring it, and
thus revealing the full face. The images are unchanged, except certain features may be enhanced to better highlight the face. Make-up for the face, if you will. The original
image is provided, so see if you can find the hidden half-face. I’ve also added some painted
versions of each face, which I hope you’ll like.
The faces you’ll find here could more accurately be called James Webb Hidden “HALF” Faces. They are made by taking a NASA released image from the James Webb Space Telescope, whether a galaxy, a star cluster, a constellation, or other image, and finding “half of a face” somewhere in the image, cropping that out, mirroring it, and
thus revealing the full face. The images are unchanged, except certain features may be enhanced to better highlight the face. Make-up for the face, if you will. The original
image is provided, so see if you can find the hidden half-face. I’ve also added some painted
versions of each face, which I hope you’ll like.
The faces you’ll find here could more accurately be called James Webb Hidden “HALF” Faces. They are made by taking a NASA released image from the James Webb Space Telescope, whether a galaxy, a star cluster, a constellation, or other image, and finding “half of a face” somewhere in the image, cropping that out, mirroring it, and
thus revealing the full face. The images are unchanged, except certain features may be enhanced to better highlight the face. Make-up for the face, if you will. The original
image is provided, so see if you can find the hidden half-face. I’ve also added some painted
versions of each face, which I hope you’ll like.