r/trypophobia

Image 1 — 100% biodegradable (PHA) stool that turns into wildflowers.
Image 2 — 100% biodegradable (PHA) stool that turns into wildflowers.
Image 3 — 100% biodegradable (PHA) stool that turns into wildflowers.
Image 4 — 100% biodegradable (PHA) stool that turns into wildflowers.
▲ 420 r/trypophobia+1 crossposts

100% biodegradable (PHA) stool that turns into wildflowers.

A stool that, as it degrades, turns into wildflowers.

The stool is 3D printed in PHA, a bacteria-produced material that is 100% biodegradable. Its shape comes from 3D-scanned rocks, while the surface is inspired by fungi and microbial structures.

It sits between the natural and the digital: organic in form, material, and afterlife, but made through a fully digital process.

Inside are seeds and nutrients, allowing the object to slowly break down until what remains is not waste, but wildflowers.

https://www.instagram.com/nicho.ms/

u/In_Praise_0f_shadows — 5 hours ago

Yarrow flowers

Went to the beach and took this photo to try to identify this plant. Turns out, it was trypophobia the whole time.

u/theLola — 1 day ago

The bottom of my Pot after boiling milk in it…..

This one got me good. I literally gagged after seeing this. This is the second time today I’ve genuinely experienced nausea/unwell feeling after seeing multiple holes next to each other even though I don’t really have a history of trypophobia.

u/fatimacx — 1 day ago
▲ 879 r/trypophobia+1 crossposts

🔥 Unidentified Cucumber!Identified lol 🤓🫡

Do y’all remember the UNIDENTIFIED CUCUMBER?!?

I gave it a good 6~months of researching 🧐 but I’m pretty sure the last recorded documentation of this 🥒 species in Texas was 1922!!! UNTIL MEEE back in
January 2026.

Thanks to the amazing Cuke researchers who came through on Reddit/FB with the paper depicting the species and I found the Hubert Clark reference/noting the species in Texas once over a century ago!!! 104 years to be precise!

Peep Fig. 17/18 for reference pics of the species it was identified as! And second link is the original 1922 Clark paper reference from Texas!

https://www.zobodat.at/pdf/EJT\_0949\_0001-0096.pdf

https://marinespecies.org/aphia.php?p=sourceget&id=145697

u/indicator_species — 5 days ago

This one got me good..

There is a video circulating about this... It's a hair transplant procedure... It was very icky watching them insert them into the holes...

u/PuzzledExaminer — 6 days ago