Human Ingredients: 25 Products Sourced from the Human Body

21Jewelry Made from Teeth

Jewelry Made from Teeth

Jewelry made from human teeth is a niche and unconventional art form that utilizes human teeth as the primary material for crafting unique pieces.


22Placenta Consumption After Childbirth

Placenta Consumption After Childbirth

After childbirth, some mothers choose to consume the placenta, using methods like consuming it raw in a smoothie, incorporating it into dishes like lasagna, stew, spaghetti, or pizza, or dehydrating it and making it into a pill.


23Ancient Bone Flutes Discovery

Ancient Bone Flutes Discovery

The Jiahu neolithic site in China has yielded flutes dating back to 7,000 BC-5,000 BC that could be the earliest playable instruments ever found. Fragments of bone flutes from this period are still playable today and are remarkably similar to modern versions in terms of hole placement.


24Eerie Blood Sculptures by Artist

Eerie Blood Sculptures by Artist

British artist Marc Quinn, inspired by Rembrandt, creates macabre self-portraits using his own blood. He crafts eerie sculptures of his head from his frozen blood, requiring nine pints, roughly the amount in a human body. Since 1991, he has created five such blood heads, documenting his aging process. One even sold for $465,000. Storing them in freezers presents a unique challenge. Quinn plans to create the last one after his death, using all the blood drained from his body-enough to rival a scene from "The Shining."


25Artist's Lifelike Wooden Replica

Artist's Lifelike Wooden Replica

Before dying from tuberculosis in 1885, Japanese artist Hananuma Masakichi created an eerily lifelike wooden replica of his body. He meticulously sculpted every detail, using thousands of wood strips, his own hair, nails, and even teeth to ensure an exact likeness. Masakichi exhibited the sculpture alongside himself and challenged viewers to identify the real artist. However, his girlfriend left him, and he eventually passed away a decade later, broken and destitute. The sculpture later found a home in Robert Ripley's collection for a mere $10.

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