Living Jewelry That Grows On Your Body While You Wear It
Fur is murder, but it’s hard to wear a living thing. Unless it’s stylish jewelry with living succulents, of course! That’s the premise of Passionflower jewelry, sold on their Etsy store. Each of their pieces contains succulents. You can wear the jewelry for 2-4 weeks, after which the plant will start growing out. It’s the sign for you to take it out of the bracelet and whatever, and plant it.
Susan McLeary is the mad genius behind this design. “Before I was a florist, I made jewelry for friends,” she said in an online interview. “When one such friend got married, she asked me to design her wedding flowers in addition to her jewelry. As I had her flowers in my hands, I knew I’d found my medium. One wedding turned into many more, and before I knew it I was working as an event florist. I still adore designing for weddings, but have found that I enjoy creating floral wearables and (not surprisingly) floral jewelry even more.”
More info: etsy | passionflowerevents.com | facebook (h/t: sosuperawesome )

Martynas Klimas
Writes like a mad dervish, rolls to dodge responsibility, might have bitten the Moon once.
20-Year-Old Engineer’s Idea To Make Ocean Clean Itself Will Be Launched Next Year
Boyan Slat is a 20 year old with an idea on how to clean plastic trash from our oceans. The Ocean Cleanup initiative wants to reduce the amount of trash in the oceans by employing floating barriers that are moored to the seabed. They would collect lighter-than-water plastic trash with the help of the ocean currents and without harming sea life.
The pilot, which will be deployed near Tsushima Island (located between Japan and Korea) in the first quarter of 2016, will test the durability and viability of the project. It will be only 2000 meters long, a far cry from the planned 100 kilometers length, but it will still be the longest floating structure on Earth.
Cleaning up plastic garbage in ocean, like the infamous Great Pacific Garbage Patch, is impractical with ships. However, the 100km stationary cleanup array could remove 42% of the Garbage Patch over 10 years, 70,320,000kg in total.
More info: theoceancleanup.com | Facebook | Twitter (h/t: boredpanda )
When it’s deployed in 2016, the 2,000m floating line will become the longest floating structure in the world.

This concept will test out 20-year-old Boyan Slat’s plan to rid the oceans of floating plastic waste.

This plan would use ocean currents to skim the plastic trash without harming the sea life.

The eventual Ocean Cleanup Array would be a 100km long and able to collect 70,320,000kg of plastic waste over 10 years

Estimated clean up cost would be roughly 4.53 euros (5.04 USD) per kilogram – 3% of the cost of other potential clean-up methods

Martynas Klimas
Writes like a mad dervish, rolls to dodge responsibility, might have bitten the Moon once.