Usually when I make a Thing in a Jar, I try to keep the shape ambiguous enough so that the viewer cannot really pin down exactly what they're looking at. The glass jar acts as a physical barrier, preventing the viewer from directly accessing its contents. The murky fluid acts as a visual barrier, making the exact details of the form indistinct. The viewer is forced to fill in the gaps with their own imagination.
It's fun to leave the Thing in a Jar in someone's refrigerator and watch their reaction.
(via Gimbo)
ever tried (jugged hare)it's an english thing