Hard Work

Build-a-Job
Colorful Bites

Martí Guixé’s food design is witty and fun…
The colors indicate the ingredients of the cake in percentages.
More Here.
Long Coop

Coop’s paintings are too good to be true…
Parts With Appeal, is a 78-foot-long painting.
Goddamn it, I want one.
Bouncing Balloon
You know I’m a whore for High Speed Videos…
Riding The Bomb

Dr. Strangelove stills made with household objects…
Changing Matter

Pink Secret

As this comes up in conversation quite often I’ll post it here as reference:
Your salmon is dyed.
Hit Record

I had absolutely no idea that the gold records aboard the Voyager Spacecraft had encoded photos too.
Mies Van Der Rock
Sing along to Mies’ story.
Only for architecture freaks.
Internet Porn
Get your facts straight… Mildly NSFW.
Good way to promote a site by the way.
Star and Planet Scale
Broken Points

Long Pencil by FlipFlopFlying.
Scary Demolition

Risking it all to demolish a chimney…
Are they naive or is this the way this is done?
Pneumatic Anatomica

For those of you wondering about the anatomy of an inflatable dog.
Inspired By Fairies
When I was in school, I had to wear this double-breasted blazer, with eight gold buttons and an emblem on the pocket saying GOD IS MY STRENGTH. Later, I cut the crest off the jacket and sewed it inside one of my other jackets. It was so obnoxious, but I had to keep it because it was part of those days. We should have this love-hate relationship with the things we wear.
Kean Etro on what’s sexy. BTW his clothing, is to die for…
Hot Maneuvers

This is not your mother’s ironing… This is Extreme Ironing.
Spider Car
Wow!
Panama Canal Timelapse
Three Way
Front Design’s changing cupboard.
How Duckies Are Made

Cecil Vortex interviews Ze Frank on being creative.
Looks Like Fun

Flies beware! The Flygun is here.
Bread is Dangerous
Research on bread indicates that:
1. More than 98 percent of convicted felons are bread users.
2. Fully HALF of all children who grow up in bread-consuming households score below average on standardized tests.
3. In the 18th century, when virtually all bread was baked in the home, the average life expectancy was less than 50 years; infant mortality rates were unacceptably high; many women died in childbirth; and diseases such as typhoid, yellow fever, and influenza ravaged whole nations.

