I'm having a hard time imagining who would buy this faux blood covered tea set. (Via Moggit)
A while back I wrote about a very impressive skull-shaped cake someone had baked. Here's another one for your collection of anatomical confection photos.
Via TrendLand...
material naturalistic anatomical study." (For more examples of her work, click here.)
Just the type of game I would have enjoyed when I was 8. Click here for more information on the game.
"One of these days, zombies will rise from the dead and take over the world. In the meantime, you can kind of get a feel for what they’re all about with this handy spin folder. Each glossy folder features classic spinner technology; just flick the spinner and watch it twirl round and round before stopping on an answer."
Artist Adam Parker Smith would lead you to believe this is part of an "ongoing exploration involving consumerist addiction to violence and the infatuation with the high school crush" and "combines craftwork and portraiture in order to present the aftermath of an imagined scene inspired by Ernest Hemingway’s For Whom The Bell Tolls." Personally, I just think that this must be what happens to Muppets when they die.
The idea of a restaurant in a graveyard seems exciting, but the reality is kind of lame. Seems that it's more "built over" a graveyard than "in" a graveyard. And those small green graves? What's creepy about that?
These seem more like the type of graphics you might expect to see in a horror film than in a print ad for handmade boots.
Every hour, Jack breaks through the door and says his famous "Here's Johnny" line as Shelly Duvall screams.
Heather Tompkins decorated her friend Taylor's plaster cast with an excellent anatomical rendering.
(Via vi.sualize.us)
Not sure what to do with your lovedone's remains? Let Nadine Jarvis turn them into pencils. "Pencils made from the carbon of human cremains. 240 pencils can be made from an average body of ash - a lifetime supply of pencils for those left behind. Each pencil is foil stamped with the name of the person. Only one pencil can be removed at a time, it is then sharpened back into the box causing the sharpenings to occupy the space of the used pencils. Over time the pencil box fills with sharpenings - a new ash, transforming it into an urn. The window acts as a timeline, showing you the amount of pencils left as time goes by."
I have a feeling that this anatomical duvet only exists in the photography of Taiyo Onorato and Nico Krebs. Too bad. I'd totally buy one.
These Threadless shirts are almost completely sold out. It's a great image though.