I was playing around with matches one day and thought about how the heads of matches are slightly larger than the bodies. It got me wondering what would happen if I started gluing them together and never stopped. I imagined a sphere would form so I
 As I started the project I was very interested in trying to figure out approximately how many matches I would need.  I was buying them in boxes of 300 from my grocery store (I am sure they thought I was crazy) and needed to know if I was about to br
 I used that 0.82 degree angle to help me find the circle that the matches would create based on their shape.  According to the program, if all matches are created equally (which they are not) then I would get a circle comprised of 439 matches that i
 Now I started indulging myself and tried to model the sphere in 3D space.
 I modeled the damn thing but my computer couldn't render it.  I had to keep cutting away parts until I stopped running out of memory.  For your pleasure, here is a quarter of the sphere rendered in virtual reality!
 Then the gluing began!  I think the best way to describe this process is to articulate my mental and emotional state while gluing matches together for hours upon hours.  This photo was taken at a time of excitement and optimism.  My theory was worki
 This photo marks a turning point in my euphoria to a strong understanding of just how much time, energy, and matches were going to go into this sphere.  The shape was coming out nicely but it was taking a long time just to get a single layer of matc
 Early on I realized that aligning matches so that the heads were all sitting in the same direction helped me glue them up much much faster.  I could grab about 7 matches at a time and hot glue them to the globe.
 The joy of nearing the halfway point here was doused by the fact that I was using boxes of 300 matches and a single box wouldn't even get me a single layer of growth.  The middle was a depressing time.
 But I kept going!  And it kept growing!  And it started to look less like a sphere and more like a child's approximation of a sphere.  I had to let go of the idea of perfection when I saw that I hadn't been able to maintain a perfect growth just by
 So close but so damn far.  It also got harder to place the matches as I had to reach inside the curve.  Also it should be noted that I was doing all this work in a metal shop so it was a lot of fun to keep sparks away from this.  Huge thanks go out
 I love this photo and it shows how funky the sphere gets by the end.  It didn't remain a perfect globe but it certainly turned into something cool to look at.
 I kept all my empty boxes of matches in order to get an estimate of how many I used in the end.  I finished with exactly 140 boxes of matches that went into this project.  If they all actually had exactly 300 matches in them, that equals 42,000 matc
 And this is what you get.  Turns out all green matches are not exactly the same color and I have no idea why they shifted the way they did.  The potential energy here was very palpable.  All in all this thing took approximately ten months to create
 And here is our final result.  Green has turned to black, potential has turned to spent, and I am never doing this again.
prev / next