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"Big Appetites" by Christopher Boffoli
"Big Appetites" by Christopher Boffoli.
“Big Appetites” is a collection of still life photographic sculptures of miniature people on food landscapes. Inspired by the media Boffoli was exposed to as a child, he created these sculptures to invoke a child like understanding of objects in the world to entirely disproportionate scales.


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At first glance, it may look like the real Big Ben. But wait… what’s that hand doing in there? Actually, it’s the hand of photographer and tourist Michael Hughes who creates cool optical illusions ...

It’s very popular to create musicians portraits from vinyl records or recycled cassette tapes. This time the following portraits were created from cds. For the inauguration of First Floor Under, a pop ...
The 16th Avenue Tiled Steps Project
The 16th Avenue Tiled Steps project has been a neighborhood effort to create a beautiful mosaic running up the risers of the 163 steps located at 16th and Moraga in San Francisco. Sponsored by the San ...
The 16th Avenue Tiled Steps project has been a neighborhood effort to create a beautiful mosaic running up the risers of the 163 steps located at 16th and Moraga in San Francisco. Sponsored by the San ...
10 Creative and Unusual T-Shirts
Today, we can’t imagine our lives without the T-Shirt, however “t-shirt” didn’t even exist in English dictionary until the 1920′s, and only in 1960′s it became stylish and entered the mainstream fash ...
Today, we can’t imagine our lives without the T-Shirt, however “t-shirt” didn’t even exist in English dictionary until the 1920′s, and only in 1960′s it became stylish and entered the mainstream fash ...
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This amazing five bedroom, four bathroom, luxury pad in Queenstown, New Zealand, is outstanding in architectural design and attention to detail. The 7 ...

As more and more firms begin to visualize bathrooms as areas for indulgence and living, the concepts they put forward tend to reflect this philosophy. ...

Beautiful stained glass door made of hundreds of pantone swatches by Italian architect Armin Blasbichler.

If you are like me, you grew up with a copy of the classic children’s book Where The Wild Things Are on your bookshelf. I can still remember when I wa ...