Newel offers for sale these unusual chairs that date back to 19th Century Italy. Such lovely and fantastic furniture was fashionable in elite circles at the time. They're gilt with silver and gold. The smallest of the three opens and closes like an actual hinged shell. They're yours for a mere $7,250.
What makes Andrew's Jeep so scary is that it's driven from the right side, so it really looks like Pennywise is driving on the left! With animated movements and recordings of the monster's voice, you might think that it will run you down.
Andrew Johnson of Louisville, Kentucky, makes many Jeeps like this. He takes them to events and gets a lot of favorable responses, especially from Pennywise's favorite victims. He explained to WLKY News:
Lots of kids really, really like it. I go to schools and festivals. It's a lot of fun.
13 years ago, Alex, the founder of Neatorama, blogged about an unusual luxury toilet sold by the French furnishings company Herbeau. A mounted ceramic plaque tells the tale of King Dagobert I (r. 629-639), one of the Kings of the Franks of the Merovingian Dynasty.
Dagobert is the central character in the French children's song Le Bon Roi Dagobert. In it, Saint Eligius (Eloy), one of his ministers of government, warns him against foolish actions, such as wearing his pants inside out. The toilet has a music box that plays this song whenever the lid is opened.
Once you have tended to affairs of state, you may flush. This rings a bell "thus letting everyone know that all is well in the kingdom."
Ebay member Elaine Chernov became the proud owner of one "because the people at the popular card game Cards Against Humanity sent it to me as a joke." She has kept it crated.
So, good news everyone! Even though at least 13 years have passed since this gem of a commode entered the market, you can still get one! Although it originally sold for $14,000, you can have it from Chernov for a mere $6,300!
Along the Rhine River, there's a tiny piece of Germany surrounded on all sides by Switzerland. Büsingen am Hochrhein is an enclave and an exclave that consists of just 3 square miles of territory that is home to over a thousand residents. BBC Travel visited it and learned how this Alpine village remained German territory:
For Büsingen, the problem began in 1693, long before Germany existed. The village was under Austrian control when a family feud over religious allegiance led to the kidnapping of the Catholic-leaning feudal lord of Büsingen. His cousins hauled him to the nearby Swiss (and Protestant) town of Schaffhausen, where he was sentenced to life in prison. It took six years and the threat of Austria invading Schaffhausen to finally free the lord.
A few decades later, when Austria sold its local holdings to the Swiss canton of Zurich, it held on to Büsingen – strictly out of spite, according to historians. “They said it would never go back to Switzerland. Never, ever, ever,” the deputy mayor said.
That meant that when parts of the Austrian Empire were later absorbed by Germany in the 19th Century, Büsingen was claimed by the new republic.
The orderly Swiss tried to clear up the mess in 1919 when it held a referendum that saw Büsingen residents voting by 96% to leave Germany. But Berlin wasn’t interested in giving the town up because Switzerland offered nothing in return.
The people of Büsingen effectively live in two different nations and cross the border as needed:
Nowhere is the division more evident than at Restaurant Waldheim. A line painted across its outdoor dining terrace marks the international border, so it’s possible to be served a plate of schnitzel in Switzerland, and then reach into Germany to grab a stein of beer from the other side of the table.
Still, for residents, living a binational life brings up daily contradictions and choices. Although commerce is typically conducted in Swiss francs and most residents work in nearby, larger Swiss towns, they still must pay the higher German income taxes. Children go to a local (German) primary school, but parents decide in which country they’ll attend high school. Likewise, Büsingen locals have both German and Swiss postal and international telephone codes: callers can dial either Germany’s +49 or Switzerland’s +41, and still ring a resident. And perhaps most notably, the town’s football club is the only German team allowed to play in the Swiss league.
By the standards of aircraft carriers, that's quite cheap!
The São Paulo began its career in 1963 in the French navy. The French sold it to the Brazilians in 2000, where it became that nation's flagship.
It was mostly a disappointing experience for the Brazilians, as the ship required very expensive and repeated upgrades and overhauls. The Drive explains that the Brazilians grew weary of this incessant work that prevented the ship from sailing actively most of the time. In 2017, they decommissioned the carrier.
It's now up for auction. You (or, perhaps, the State of Wyoming) can become its next owner. So start digging through the couch cushions for loose change.
It's a beautiful day in the neighborhood. Won't you be Captain America's neighbor? His friends, H the Owl, Scarlet Henrietta, and Iron Trolley would like to sing a song. Do you want to join them? They welcome you and like you just the way you are in this cosplay by @psy_phi.
Apparently the Martha Stewart brand is more than just refined, tasteful decor and furnishings. It can cut a swath through the winter hell outside your home in order to prepare a Vietnamese-style chicken soup in your Instant Pot. Her buddy Snoop will provide brownies.
I don't need a snow thrower here in Texas. But if she offers a stump grinder, I'll look into it.
A few years ago, when I heard that some people play money to watch other people play video games, I was confused. It was explained to me that this is similar to watching other people play sports. That makes sense, although I don't see the appeal of that activity either.
I nod and smile when young students at my college tell me about their favorite streamers on Twitch. Given that it's a huge industry and it's possible to earn money through it in a variety of watching-other-people-play-video-games related professions, I can respect it.
With the appropriate cheat codes, I could probably make it through this fake video game left by Jeff Wysaski's Obvious Plant project.
It's a grand symbol of the entire Rebel Alliance and the work of Luke Skywalker. Redditor Marcus_Nery made this custom ceiling fan. One of its best features is that if it takes damage, R2 can do minor repairs on the spot.
Disney should definitely market these. There should be a huge consumer market for them.
Haburu loves to nap on his human's noise-making machine. Sometimes the noises that he uses it to make, such as something called "Brahm's Lullaby," are even soothing.
What's even better is when the hammers of the noise-making machine provide a gentle massage along one's back. The human and his machine are useful.
For 25 years, Dr. David Scheel of Alaska Pacific University has studied octopodes.
When he got divorced, his ex-wife got all of the living room furniture. This freed up a lot of space. He decided to fill it with an enormous saltwater aquarium. That's when Heidi the octopus came into his life.
He watches Heidi a lot. During one scene in the PBS show Nature, Scheel describes watching Heidi sleep. She changes color several times. Scheel thinks that she's dreaming and narrates the dream.
Photographer Joseph Ford and knitting artist Nina Dodd combined their skills to show people blending into very specific backgrounds by wearing very specific sweaters. Their project, which is appropriately titled Knitted Camouflage, is an incredibly detailed project that must have taken meticulous planning--especially for Dodd. Perhaps in the future, we'll see clothing that does this automatically.
Night vision goggles are amazing, but they're also bulky, limit your field of vision, and require electricity. What if you could just inject the ability directly into your eyeballs? Would you do it?
Research from the University of Massachusetts Medical School suggests that may be a possibility. Popular Mechanics reports:
In a study from the University of Massachusetts Medical School, researchers injected nanoparticles that converted infrared light into visible light into the eyes of mice. Those mice were then placed in a maze along with mice who didn't receive the injections, and were able to find their way out of the maze. The nanoparticles bound to the photoreceptors of the mice's eyes and provided night vision for up to 10 weeks without any ill effects.
Can we transfer this technology to humans?
Xue Tian, a scientist based in China, is quoted as saying he “definitely” thought it would work in humans.