We love these photos New York photographer Rä di Martino took of abandoned Star Wars set
locations in Tunisia for her series
Every World’s a Stage and No More Stars.

View more by clicking Read More below.

 
 
The Power of Books is an interesting photo series by designer Mladen Penev. Is it just us or is he taking the engaging nature of a good book a bit too literally....
 
 
My, don't they scrub up well? Here are some Game of Thrones hotties posing for Radio Times magazine.
 
 
So this is pretty cool. A Canadian photographer called Daniel Picard has created a series of images that place small action figures into real photographs - giving the impression that they're life-size. 

View more of Daniel's pictures by clicking Read More below. 

 
 
This gorgeous Link cosplayer is Molecular Agatha, who has re-imagined Hyrule's hero steampunk-style. Agatha constructed all of the accessories herself, including those Triforce marked goggles.

Photographed by Daniela Alfaro Enkantazya.
 
 
Jesus. We still haven't gotten over the Vadering and Dragon Ball fighting photo trends floating around, and now there's a new one - Quidditch playing. Originating in Japan, the enthusiasm for grabbing a broom and having your picture taken jumping with it is now making its way over here.
 
 
We like this.  Stitchagram is a company that allows Instagram users to design pillows, tote bags and clutches using colleges of their own pictures. So, if you think your friends are pretty enough to adorn your home....

Available from $28.
 
 
So this is cool. A man called Michael Birken has incorporated the familiar shapes of Pac Man, Donkey Kong and Zelda into a stop-motion animation video. Oh, and he did it using colourful post-it notes that took him 11 months to arrange. Michael took an incredible 5,722 individual still-frame images, and then joined them all together. Yeah, anyone could have done it. Not really. Go watch the video.
 
 
It all started with Japanese kids play-acting anime-style attacks and then uploading the pictures online. Now we have 'Vadering' - which depicts people (ahem, read 'grown adults') suffering from Darth Vader's Force Grip. Here are our favourites.

 
 
Now, I'm sure Eyes as Big as Plates, Portraits of Seniors Covered in Organic Materials is supposed to be profoundly moving or controversial or thought-provoking (surely one of those). But I can't help thinking that this is just a photo collection of unimpressed looking elderly people wearing daft things on their heads. And in one instance, some poor man has been made to lie face-down on the ground, making him look like someone who desperately needs an ambulance.