The Infinite Mirror disrupts the traditional mirror’s role as a passive reflector, proposing instead an active dialogue between user and object. Designed with two perpendicular yet interconnected reflective planes, it divides the reflection into distinct top and bottom halves, fragmenting the familiar immediacy of one’s self-image. The mirror transforms the act of seeing oneself into a process—a negotiation of movement, angles, and perspectives required to assemble the fragmented image into a coherent whole. This deliberate disruption invites users to reconsider the spatial and temporal dimensions of reflection. The Infinite Mirror shifts the experience from one of instant recognition to a more dynamic, performative interaction, asking: what is a “whole” image of oneself? How do we reconcile fragmentation in perception with the continuity of identity? The dual-plane design is not merely an aesthetic gesture but a conceptual exploration of multiplicity, duality, and the nature of self-perception. It challenges the habitual passivity of looking and replaces it with an embodied experience of discovering, connecting, and constructing one’s image within space and time.