Cutting-edge examples of the use of optical illusion in design-from trompe l'oeil to anamorphosis-to solve various challenges, be they space or budget related, or that act as aesthetic features in architecture and the fields that rub elbows with it: art, design, and furniture.
This  magical  volume  presents  the  startling  world  of illusion in design as employed by today's architects, interior designers, furniture designers, and others at work bending the appearance of reality for purposes of  aesthetics  or  practicality  or  fun.  From  a  faux bookcase that masks a room or Prohibition-style bar, to the mind-boggling Escher-like effects achieved by Casa Ceramica, whose optical illusion of a floor dips into  valleys  and  rises  into  mounds  (but  is  in  reality flat),  the  book  is  a  revelation  and  an  inspiration.  It offers to us the possibility that nearly anything can be done, if it can be imagined-even in our own homes.
 
The  authors  look  at  residences  across  the  globe, as  well  as  spaces  beyond  the  home,  that  utilize a  myriad  of  surprising  techniques. 
Included are projects by conceptual designers such as Studio Malka and Vector Architects, as well as established practitioners such as Ferguson and Shamamian, G. P. Schafer, Peter Pennoyer, Redd/Kaihoi, and others, and all will surprise and engage the inspired viewer who will see that nearly anything can be done, if it can be imagined.