Portraits made with beach plastic by artist Annarita Serra.
Since 2000 Annarita Serra has been collecting pieces of plastic from a beach in Sardinia (Italy) during the winter, after it has been washed up by the sea.
She cleans it, divides it by color and then nearly all the pieces are combined to give birth to works of art, ranging from portraits to sculptures to point out the deleterious effect of plastic debris on the marine environment: the cause of death of many marine species. Click through to view more!

The Gyroscopic self leveling pool table was spoted on the “Radiance of the Seas” cruise ship. The pool table adjusts while the ship is in motion so that the billiard balls remain stationary.
The 8-Bit Heart Necklace and Pendants is made by River Lee.
Dimension :
Heart : 3.5 x 3.5 cm
Acrylic Thickness : 3 mm each layer (there’s 3 layers)
Necklace : 26″ each
[Source]
The Hammerhead Shark made out of vacuums was created by Redditor shuttersubversive. The shark is made from two Eureka vacuums, a pair of tail light covers, two broken camera lenses, a coffee maker, obsolete street signs, and the teeth are wood. All were saved from the dumpster.
[Source]

Drawing with fire by artist Steven Spazuk. These drawings are made up of small pieces of canvas exposed to fire to create a larger incredible drawing. Check out the video after the break to see how Steven creates these incredible portraits with fire.

Don’t play with your food, unless Colonel Sanders says so. Click through for more pictures.

Created by designer Andreas Licht, Herrlicht glasses are hand-crafted from maple, pear and walnut.

Volker Kraft lives in Saalfeld near the border with the Czech Republic. The Easter Egg Tree in Germany is decorated with almost 10,000 hand decorated Easter eggs and takes their entire family two weeks to hang them all! Click through to view more!
Programming for the helmet code was done by James Moss.
Chroming work courtesy of Creations n’ Chrome.
Custom PCBs printed by batchPCB.com.
Visor vacuum-forming performed by Mike Iverson.
Some video and photography courtesy of Emily Krix













