Cakeland designs by Scott Hove


    Cakeland bakery designs by Scott Hove

    Cakeland is a sculptural installation in Oakland, created to look like a delicious collection of cakes. Featuring cakes placed on tables, stacked on top of other cakes, mounted on walls and even hanging from the ceiling, Cakeland literally looks like heaven for sweet addicts. But alas Scott Hove’s cakes are anything but edible. Unlike the regular treats that last only until celebrations end, Cakeland cakes are made from acrylic, wood and cardboard and will last “as long as the artist or society have the wherewithal to preserve them”.

    But that’s not the worst part of our nightmare. In order to protect their delicious beauty, the artists equipped some of the cakes with sharp teeth that act as defense. Hove says “without this aggressive aspect call it the anti-cake– the beauty is vulnerable, transitory, and not to be respected”.

    Cakeland Photo is a very interesting, but unlike Scott Hove who sees it as a pilgrimage site away from the problems of reality, some might consider it torture. After all finding yourself surrounded by seemingly delicious cakes, without the possibility of even tasting them can be a grueling experience. Here Download the Videos Cakeland download Cakeland 360 (Quicktime file)













































































Amazing Illusions pictures

    At a moment's glance this picture could be the real Big Ben.

    But then you notice the hand below and the incredible optical illusion is revealed.

    Tourist Michael Hughes today unveiled his extraordinary holiday snaps of the world's famous landmarks - perfectly blended with cheap souvenirs.

    Michael, 56, stumbled across his unusual technique in 1998 and has perfected it after travelling to hundreds of famous sights.

    His series of stunning photos include a Golden Gate fridge magnet slotted ideally into the San Francisco landscape.

    London icon: Photographer Michael Hughes holds a souvenir model Big Ben in front of the real thing


    Tourist hotspot: Hughes holds a souvenir Eiffel Tower in front of the site in Paris


    American dream: A coffee cup showing the Statue of Liberty replaces the infamous landmark

    A plastic Eiffel Tower toy between the camera and the steel structure creates an appearance that the top of the Paris landmark has been painted red, yellow and blue.

    And a Big Ben money bank positioned next to the houses of parliament eclipses the original so well it could be mistaken for the real version.

    Michael also held The Beatles' Abbey Road album in front of the famous London zebra crossing so it appears that the band members are actually walking across the road.


    Famous four: Holding the CD Abbey Road with Iain Macmillan's photo in front of the zebra crossing gives the impression The Beatles are there


    Optical illusion: A souvenir mug showing the Victory Column, Berlin in front of the real thing in Germany


    Surreal view: A souvenir fridge magnet of the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco

    He has travelled to over 200 countries and has a collection of nearly 100 similar shots - but incredibly says he stumbled on the idea by accident.

    British-born Michael, 56, who emigrated to Berlin, Germany with wife Marion, 52, and daughter Lea, 14, in 1983, said: 'I was on the tourist platform at the Lorelei cliffs next to the river Rhine when I held up a postcard I bought for my daughter.

    'I was amazed because it just seemed to fill a massive grey hole that was in the sky and it was the exact position the photographer had taken the picture from.


    World in his hand: Hughes holds up a souvenir postcard of The Gateway of India in Mumbai


    Mysterious site: A souvenir model Great Sphinx of Giza, in front of the historic statue in Eygpt


    Building bridges: A souvenir model is held in front of Tower Bridge over the river Thames in London

    After that I noticed coffee cups from a shop near the Statue of Liberty had the statue printed on so I poured my drink on the floor, and position it in front of the statue.

    'Since then taking the pictures has developed into a hobby and a passion to the point where I have been taking trips recently just to photograph a souvenir next to its landmark.'

    Michael, who travels extensively with his job, said the hobby has progressed into a 'sport with its own rules'.


    Picture perfect: A postcard of Schoenbrunn, Austria in front of the stunning building


    All aboard: A pencil case in the shape of a London bus appears to drive down the street


    Iconic site: A brass pyramid paperweight in front of the amazing landmark in Cairo, Egypt

    He arrives at the destination, visits the nearest souvenir and buys the cheapest souvenir.

    Michael then takes up to 50 photographs with a wide angle lens on a digital camera until he has the ornament positioned in exact proportion to the landmark.

    He has photographed the Egyptian pyramids and Sphinx, London's red buses and the Berlin Brandenburg - all combined with their souvenirs.

    The pictures have earned Michael more than 5 million hits on file-sharing website Flickr and an invite to appear on America's prime-time The Tonight Show with Jay Leno.

    Michael, who works as a freelance photographer in Germany, added: 'I used to be a souvenir snob and I'd only buy the most expensive ornaments.

    'Now I've turned that on its head by using cheap ones and doing this childish idea of putting them in the picture.

    'Several photographers had toyed with the idea and some people do things like putting fingers above buildings but I'm the only person to do this.

    'Thankfully it's actually very difficult to do it properly so nobody can copy me, though they do try.'

    Michael has released 20 of the best images in a book called Souvenirs published by graphic designers Fivefootsix based in London.

    He said: 'Souvenirs are actually something to prove somebody has had a life and they have been somewhere important.

    'They are part of something sentimental that most people didn't like to admit to - I think they're pretty damn weird.'


    Scenic landscape: A driftwood sculpture of a riverbank in Helsinki, Finland



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