Oddity Central

Oddity Central


Japanese Company Creates Creepy Hugging Chair for the Lonely

Posted: 03 Oct 2014 01:07 AM PDT

Nothing compares to the warm hug of a real person, but when there's no one else around, this nifty little Japanese invention can do the job quite well. It's called the 'tranquility chair' – its back is shaped like a giant human doll with a friendly face and long arms that can wrap around you in an affectionate embrace.

The chair is the brainchild of Japanese company UniCare – they're selling the product for 46,000 yen ($ 419) at the International Home Care and Rehabilitation Exhibition in Tokyo. "It makes you feel safe," said a UniCare spokesperson. "Anyone can use it, but it is designed for older people."

Given that a quarter of Japan's population is currently over the age of 65, and the number is expected to rise to 40 percent in coming decades, the tranquility chair is really quite apt for the Japanese market. The company has come up with a host of similar products, like 'Life Rhythm Dolls' that are programmed to remind owners to take their medicine or go to the toilet.

hugging-chair

Multimedia Artist Creates Portrait of Nikola Tesla Using Electricity

Posted: 03 Oct 2014 12:27 AM PDT

To pay tribute to Serbian inventor and electrical engineering genius Nikola Tesla, artist Phil Hansen recently created a portrait of him using only electric sparks.

A time lapse video of Hansen creating the painting shows him connecting a couple of wires to a large battery. He then brings the two naked ends of the wire together to produce sparks. He uses the sparks to create burn marks of varying darkness on paper, creating the eyes, nose and other features of Tesla's face until the mind-blowing portrait is complete.

Tesla-electricity-portrait

Man Spends Two Years Covering Every Inch of His House with Seashells

Posted: 03 Oct 2014 12:11 AM PDT

Xiao Yongsheng is the owner of a small beach and a traditional Chinese house on Lingshan Island, off the coast of Qingdao city in eastern China's Shandong province. When he decided to renovate his large home, he wondered if it was worth spending money on expensive designers and architects. Ultimately, he decided to save up and do it for free – he spent two whole years covering every inch of his 1,500-square meter house with seashells that he collected from his own beach.

"I'd always liked shells but it never struck me to use them until I was walking on a beach one morning and came across a very unusually colored clam shell and then it hit me," said the 58-year-old. "I realised I was sitting next to a huge, free supply of beautiful building material – so why not use it?" So he began collecting every kind of shell he could find – right from tiny 3-millimeter ones to giant conches that weighed over four kilograms.

seashell-house

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