Check out this fascinating and impressive art made by bruising banana peels.
Just don’t be surprised if one of your chair legs is shorter than the other, or the icing glue comes apart.
Made from steam-bent Scandinavian Ash, bronze-plated skis, candy cane lacquer and even a solar panel to provide a heated seat, this sleigh will take Santa to his millions of Christmas destinations in style.
You may not be getting on a plane anytime soon, but you can recreate that window seat experience with Airframes.
Scottish collage artist and illustrator Lola Dupree has a tremendously clever eye, and her creatures and photo manipulations sometimes have twelve eyes or more.
Powell’s Books has a new bottled fragrance to capture the essence of a bookstore. It’s absurd and wonderful.
Some simple and clever object manipulations by Javier Pérez, taking ordinary objects and transforming them into iconic characters from Star Wars.
The Flaming Lips, a band known for their performance art, just held a live concert where everyone was safely cocooned in their own plastic bubble.
Innocent children’s board games have taken on a new, sinister identity in this series by graphic designer Justin Bryant.
Masks made of food aren’t effective protection from a pandemic. But compared to some of the anti-mask morons we’ve seen this year, they could be better than nothing.
The world doesn’t need a $350 peanut butter and jelly sandwich. But it’s here anyway, and it’s fancy.
Qantas Airline is retiring their 747 jumbo jets, and selling off their galley bar carts, fully stocked with wine, beer, and memorabilia.
This clever social distancing Halloween zipline will deliver treats in spooky fashion while staying safe.
The classic toy Polly Pocket has been reimagined with six very non-childish scenes from popular films and shows.
These vintage animal illustrations look straight out of a classic natural history book. But look closer, there’s a twist.
With 2020 being pretty much a giant disaster, what better way to overcome it than to just hibernate the rest of the year away?
In a series of fun type lettering, we see ingredients elegantly spelled out using the actual product itself. “Honey” is glisteningly gold, while “Anchovies” is scrawled from the salty fish.
Like something out of a child’s dream, there was a brief cocoa powder snow this week in the Swiss town of Olten.
First released in 1899, “France in the Year 2000” was a series of postcards that envisioned a future one hundred years ahead.