Wife asks for help pranking husband by photoshopping his Mercedes-Benz C-Class Coupe, results are hilarious

  • A woman pranked her husband with photoshopped pictures of his car
  • The car in question is a Mercedes C-Class
  • Some of these images look convincing, while others look a bit too obvious

Published on Jan 03, 2025 at 11:00 PM (UTC+4)
by Alessandro Renesis

Last updated on Jan 03, 2025 at 10:59 AM (UTC+4)
Edited by Kate Bain

A woman on Facebook asked for help pranking her husband with photoshopped pictures of his Mercedes C-Class coupe.

Believe it or not there are Facebook pages designed exactly for this sort of thing.

And, as you can imagine, the results were hilarious.

We’re just hoping she didn’t keep the prank going for too long.

DISCOVER SBX CARS: The global premium car auction platform powered by Supercar Blondie

This photoshopped Mercedes C-Class coupe looks… odd

It sounds odd but there are a lot of Facebook pages where anybody can upload a photograph and ask random strangers to photoshop it – it’s a thing.

This woman in Australia asked members of the Free Photoshop Edits Australia Facebook page to edit her husband’s car picture, and the result is brilliant.

A couple of people photoshopped the Mercedes-Benz coupe to make it look like it’s on fire, with varying results.

Meanwhile another user made the C-Class pink, which to be honest looks a bit too obvious.

Then a couple of people photoshopped the Mercedes coupe to make it look like the roof collapsed on it, and one of these edits look vaguely convincing.

When photoshopped vehicles look convincing

Photoshop is obviously the name of an image editing application, and it also became a verb, but ‘photoshopped’ is often used as a blanket term for any image that looks, or is, fake.

These days most ‘photoshopped’ images are probably edited with AI.

Either way, the result is sometimes hilarious, and sometimes eerily convincing.

A while back, somebody shared a mockup image of the Robotaxi, before the unveil, and it looked a bit ridiculous.

By contrast, the Bugatti SUV another user shared online looked real.

But our favorite moment was when a guy on TikTok was asked to share a video of his ‘enlarged’ Volkswagen because everyone believed it was photoshopped.

But it wasn’t.

After beginning his automotive writing career at DriveTribe, Alessandro has been with Supercar Blondie since the launch of the website in 2020. In fact, he penned the very first article published on supercarblondie.com. He’s covered subjects from cars to aircraft, watches, and luxury yachts - and even crypto.He can largely be found heading up the site’s new-supercar and SBX coverage and being the first to bring our readers the news that they’re hungry for.