Oddity Central |
- Norwegian Teen Tattoos McDonald’s Receipt on His Arm as a Dare
- Microscopic Wonders – Incredibly Detailed Castles Etched onto Individual Grains of Sand
- Steady Handed Chinese Man Balances Eggs on Needle Points
Norwegian Teen Tattoos McDonald’s Receipt on His Arm as a Dare Posted: 31 Mar 2014 04:52 AM PDT When 18-year-old Stian Ytterdahl's friends dared him to get a tattoo, they gave him only two options to choose from – Barbie on his buttocks or a McDonald's receipt on his arm. They're both terrible, but I suppose you can't blame Stian for choosing the latter. "Some of my mates thought I had been a bit too active on the ladies front recently and wanted to punish me," he said. "When we were in the restaurant on Monday, they said I had to tattoo a Barbie doll on my bum, or the receipt on my arm." Incidentally, this is the teenager's first tattoo ever, covering most of his lower right arm. There's a large McDonalds logo at the top, followed by a list of items he ordered off the menu – a cheeseburger and four added toppings. Stian, from Lørenskog in Southwest Norway, also said that his parents were not at all pleased with the turn of events. "I got an email from my dad that wasn't entirely positive, saying: 'What on earth have you done?! Do you think you are coming home with that!? Your mother has had a break down.'" Stian's parents got to know about the tattoo from a report in the local newspaper and they were devastated.
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Microscopic Wonders – Incredibly Detailed Castles Etched onto Individual Grains of Sand Posted: 31 Mar 2014 03:43 AM PDT Artist Vik Muniz is almost a regular here at OC. We first wrote about his art made from domestic and industrial junk in 2010. Then, in 2012 he was back with his recreation of classic paintings using torn magazine scraps. Now, in collaboration with artist and MIT researcher Marcelo Coelho, Vik has taken then opposite approach to his previous art forms. While his older, gigantic art could only be admired from high above, his latest work is microscopic – a series of sandcastles etched onto individual grains of sand. Vik said that earlier he had the opportunity to work on an environmental scale. Around that same time, he thought of "going the opposite way around and actually making things so small that it would create a similar impression. They would be so tiny that they could only be imagined, they could not be seen." When Marcelo was first approached by Vik, he thought it was a joke. "He came to me and said, I want to draw a castle on to a grain of sand. I think the sheer impossibility of that is what excited me." Vik and Marcelo spent four long years on trial-and-error experiments before they could successfully create the tiny, magnificent drawings. Each piece of art is less than half a millimeter in size – an inconsequential fleck of sand to the naked eye. Together, they devised a process involving both antiquated technology and innovative visual tools. Vik first created the sketches using a camera Lucida – an optical superimposition device from the 1800s that uses a prism to turn images in front of the viewer into projections on paper. Using this technique, he was able to trace the tiny castles.
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Steady Handed Chinese Man Balances Eggs on Needle Points Posted: 31 Mar 2014 02:33 AM PDT Cui Juguo, from Changsha city in China's Hunan Province, holds the Guinness World Record for a very unique feat – he can perfectly balance eggs on small needles. As a person who frequently breaks eggs just by holding them, I think what Cui can do is phenomenal! In the video footage below, Cui demonstrates how he can balance an ostrich egg on a needle point but as you can see in these photos, he can pull off his balancing feat with any kind of egg. "Ostrich eggs are largest in the world and I can balance them on a pin. No one else could do this," he said. "I set a Guinness World Record on August 19, 2011, and I am still the record holder." Cui has been practicing the balancing act for about 6 years now, and it takes him a mere 10 seconds to put everything in place. He used to be a truck driver and he developed the unique skill to counter sleepiness on the road. "I often take several eggs with me on the road," he said. "Once I felt sleepy, I would pull over and start to stand the egg on the needle point."
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