The image features an inventive and humorous take on how a pair of sunglasses might be worn on a person's forehead. Above the image is text that reads "The perfect sunglass holder doesn’t exi…", implying that the perfect sunglass holder doesn’t exist.
The first photograph depicts a man wearing sunglasses in the typical fashion, fitting snugly over his eyes. His forehead forms a protruding semicircular shape, which stands out above the frame of the sunglasses. The man appears to have a neutral expression on his face, looking directly into the camera.
In the second photograph, the sunglasses have been humorously moved upwards to sit on top of the protrusion on his forehead. This creates a playful illusion that the man's forehead is itself another face, with the sunglasses now appearing to serve as a pair of eyes for the forehead, while his actual eyes gaze out slightly below the shades.
What makes the image humorous to some people is the clever use of physical features, in this case, the man's prominent forehead, to create a visual joke. The text implies that a perfect sunglass holder is not real until cut off mid-sentence, thus leading the viewer to the punchline revealed in the visual.
The illusion is bolstered by the reflection in the sunglasses, which appears to be upside down compared to the man's actual viewpoint—adding another layer of visual comedy. The reflection creates a sense that the forehead face has its own perspective, distinct from that of the man's real eyes.
The perfect sunglass holder doesn t exi