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  • rasputin:

    Lego has built a 1:1 scale model of the X-Wing fighter using an astounding 5,335,200 bricks! It’s as big as the real thing. Gizmodo writes that “it reproduces the official $60 Lego 9493 X-Wing Fighter. But instead of being 560-pieces and a few inches long, this model uses more than five million pieces and it’s 11-feet tall and 43 feet long, with a 44-foot wingspan. Just like the real X-Wing—and 42 times the size of the commercial Lego set.”
    Here are all details about the model:
    Contains 5,335,200 LEGO bricks
    Weighs 45,979.61 pounds (including bricks and steel infrastructure)
    Height: 11 feet / 3.35 meters
    Length: 43 feet / 13.1 meters
    Wingspan: 44 feet / 13.44 meters
    32 builders spent 17,336 hours (about 4 months) to construct

    It took 32 Master LEGO builders approximately 4 months to build it to completion. LEGO unveiled this behemoth at Time Square in New York City.

     

    (via leftbehindtime)

    Source: rasputin
    • 15 hours ago
    • 460 notes
  • rasputin:

    howthehoolychillz:

    rasputin:

    fuckyeahlaughters:

    how?

    Monkeylectric bike lights, these are like….500-1000 a piece.  You’d think they’d put them on a nicer bike.

    If anyone put these on actual “nice bike” they deserve to get punched.

    I’ve got monkeylectric lights on my bike, they make you incredibly visible to everyone around you, they’re weatherproof, they’ve been through two instances where I was hit by a car (once right on them), and they last fucking forever (2.5 years on one set of batteries).  I love them.  but if you’re talking about the fact that its that cat thing and not the lights, you can change the pattern/picture on them.

    (via leftbehindtime)

    Source: prguitarman
    • 21 hours ago
    • 35569 notes
  • malformalady:

A baby chameleon hatches from an egg after being guarded by its mum deep down in their burrow.
Photo credit: Francisco Mingorance/solent

    malformalady:

    A baby chameleon hatches from an egg after being guarded by its mum deep down in their burrow.

    Photo credit: Francisco Mingorance/solent

    Source: malformalady
    • 1 day ago
    • 533 notes
  • (via shrimp-lovers)

    Source: smilefromasunchild
    • 1 day ago
    • 20 notes
  • be-free-fandoms:

Who wore it better?

    be-free-fandoms:

    Who wore it better?

    (via jessfacekillah)

    Source: be-free-fandoms
    • 2 days ago
    • 98 notes
  • (via leftbehindtime)

    Source: missdragoon
    • 2 days ago
    • 346 notes
  • lulz-time:

This post has been featured on a 1000notes.com blog.

    lulz-time:

    This post has been featured on a 1000notes.com blog.

    (via leftbehindtime)

    Source: humortrain
    • 2 days ago
    • 2139 notes
  • larrrsss:

african tribeswoman minus plate

    larrrsss:

    african tribeswoman minus plate

    (via hellamodified)

    Source: larrrsss
    • 2 days ago
    • 279 notes
  • trace-my-scars:

Accurate

    trace-my-scars:

    Accurate

    (via green-garden-of-unrest)

    Source: stonelions
    • 3 days ago
    • 38249 notes
  • malformalady:

Ukrainian Valerii Danevych makes his functional wrist watches almost entirely out of wood, with the sole exception of a metal spring needed to propel the movement. According to Unique Watch Guide, he mostly uses birch because of its strength and resistance, but also more exotic wood such as juniper and bamboo.
Photo credit: Valerii Danevych

    malformalady:

    Ukrainian Valerii Danevych makes his functional wrist watches almost entirely out of wood, with the sole exception of a metal spring needed to propel the movement. According to Unique Watch Guide, he mostly uses birch because of its strength and resistance, but also more exotic wood such as juniper and bamboo.

    Photo credit: Valerii Danevych

    Source: malformalady
    • 3 days ago
    • 929 notes
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