What? Creativity with Everyday Objects

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I kid, I kid – I was surfing today for crazy and out-of-the-ordinary stuff, and oh, I found some.  I found several.  People are generally creative, at least the smart ones, and make lighting fixtures out of some very simple stuff.  T products that are born from these ideas are nothing short of completely hilariously ridiculously different.  The theme with this bit of fixture craziness is cups and glasses – there’s gotta be a theme somewhere, right?  Creativity is awesome!

First up, the glass light bulb:

wineglass1

Yeah.  It’s a light bulb in the shape of a wine glass – in this case, it looks like a chianti glass.  Mellow, short, good enough to give you a decent whiff each time you turn it on.  Wait, that doesn’t make any sense – it’s a glassful of light.  Is this considered decorative?  It’s an interesting form – it looks like something I would expect to see in an airport bar somewhere.  The Glass Light Bulb runs about $120 a pop, FYI.

Next on the list, something representative of something else we all enjoy:

cone

I think this is actually quite clever – upside down ice cream cones that transform a compact fluorescent into a big ol’ gob of frozen deliciousness.  I get a real kick out of the two on the right – it really gets a pretty serious giggle from my belly.  However, it’s also full of clever and win too – make sure to use CFLs or some other kind of energy efficient lamp with these, as you want to have light ice cream, right?  (Har, har)  The Whippy Light, as it’s called, runs about £40 pounds, or about $12,456.34 USD.  I think that’s an accurate conversion, isn’t it?

Teacups seem to be all the rave nowadays when it comes to making lights.  If you do a search for teacup light, you’ll come across about 1,840,000 search results for it – each with its own special flair.  37 pieces of flair, to be exact.

How’s this for flair?

teacup1

Spot of Tea, Gov’na?  There isn’t a lot of explanation that needs to accompany this fixture – it’s a teacup, just like the ones you see at garage sales, that you screw a light bulb into so you can see.  The company that produces these (through Etsy) offers single teacup lights or clusters of teacup lights.  The fixtures will run you anywhere between $56 and $350.

Finally, but yet another teacup-and-saucer type fixture, even though it’s technically a coffee cup fixture, is the Coffee Light:

teacup2

This isn’t at all Alice in Wonderland, is it?  It’s like a tripped out coffeeshop counter that got flipped over in hyperspace with orders still attached to it.  The coffee was apparently so good that it turned into light.  That’s some pretty strong java!  In the form of a cup of Starbucks’ coffee (you know, at five bucks a cup), this fixture runs about €156.00 Euro, which I think is about eleventy billion US dollars or so.

I think it’s time for a beer. Maybe I can turn the empty bottle(s) into a light.

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