Oddity Central

Oddity Central


Turkish Motorist Builds His Own Heavy Truck Using Only Second-Hand Parts and Scrap Metal

Posted: 24 Jul 2014 04:23 AM PDT

30-year-old Ismail Mescioglu, a bus driver from Turkey, had always wanted to drive his very own truck, but he knew he could never afford to buy one. So he settled for the next best thing – to build one using discarded parts and scrap metal. Today, Ismail Mescioglu is the proud owner of a swanky street-legal red truck he named named 'IMES'

Ismail, a father-of-two from Turkey’s Tusba county, is the first person in Turkey to have built a large-size truck entirely on his own. He managed to complete the seemingly impossible project through sheer grit – he had no prior experience, no proper plan and no idea of how he was going to pull it off. "When I started the construction, everyone was taunting me," he said. "Everyone was making fun of me."

But Ismail was not one to give up. He started visiting scrap dealers and gathered as many parts as he could. He also bought an old Murat 131 car for the motor. For the body of the truck, he bought metal sheets and built the entire body of the vehicle himself. After several months of hard work, his patience finally paid off and the truck was ready. and the most impressive thing is it only cost him around $2,800.

Murat 131'den tır yaptı

The Ultra-Realistic Graphite Drawings of Monica Lee

Posted: 24 Jul 2014 02:35 AM PDT

Malaysian artist Monica Lee uses simple graphite pencils to create stunningly realistic portraits of people and animals. Through her photorealistic drawings, she manages to capture the most minute details of her subjects – faded freckles, coarse beard hair and even the subtle weaves of a shirt.

Lee worked as a digital artist for 12 years before she switched to analog drawings. She grew up admiring and appreciating the value of photographs, thanks to her father who is a photographer. So photorealism comes to her quite naturally, and she enjoys depicting as many details as possible.

"I like to challenge myself with complex portraits especially people with freckles or beard," Lee says.

Monica-Lee-drawings6

New Delhi Restaurant Run by Indian Convicts Proves Big Hit

Posted: 24 Jul 2014 01:10 AM PDT

Tihar Food Court, a new restaurant in New Delhi, serves its customers a regular fare of north Indian dishes – rice, flatbreads, lentils, samosas, and more. You'd probably get to eat these dishes at many other restaurants in India’s capital, but here's what’s special about Tihar Food Court – the food is prepared and served by convicts serving time for murder at New Delhi's infamous Tihar Jail.

The restaurant opened earlier this month within the sprawling Tihar complex – South Asia's largest prison – as a rehabilitation effort on an experimental basis. It is a rather simple eatery with indoor and outdoor seating for around 50 customers, and cream colored walls decorated with paintings made by prisoners. The small staff consists of a manager who is also a police constable, and seven convicts who have displayed good behavior over several years of imprisonment.

To be eligible to leave prison for a few hours of work at the restaurant, inmates must have a high school education and need to have maintained an 'unblemished' record for at least 12 years. They mostly pick prisoners who are due to be released within two years time, so they don't feel too tempted to escape. The inmates walk or ride a cycle to work everyday completely unsupervised, as the authorities apparently trust them enough not to provide an escort.

Tihar-Food-Court

Comments system

Disqus Shortname