You can easily tell if you have wide set
eyes by looking in the mirror, but you can also measure to be sure.
Not exact matches
You can see this effect
by looking directly at your own
eyes in a
mirror and moving your body around.
Viewed
in profile, the widened front wings, chiselled side sills, matt aluminium -
look mirror housings and large roof spoiler immediately catch the
eye, while at the rear the differentiation is clearly made
by a remodelled bumper with high - gloss black diffuser insert, honeycomb grille and four bars, from which two large, oval tailpipes boldly protrude.
There are three first - person perspectives positioned from the front wing of the car
looking directly ahead with no bodywork, a second camera angle positioned
in the centre of the front wing surrounded
by intricate bodywork and front flaps with the third first - person perspective providing a driver's
eye view from within the cockpit as the complex steering wheel can be seen while peering out just above the front wing with an incredibly detailed left and right
mirror to view what is happening directly behind your car.
They could pass for the back of Vollard's head
in a
mirror, although to modern
eyes they
look like nothing so much as the abstract Elegy to the Spanish Republic
by Robert Motherwell.
Another video closes
in on Upson's
eye, split
in two
by a
mirror, for a further equation of
looking with doubling and of mothers with
mirrors.