<![CDATA[Gizmodo: motoart]]> http://tags.gizmodo.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/gizmodo.com.png <![CDATA[Gizmodo: motoart]]> http://gizmodo.com/tag/motoart http://gizmodo.com/tag/motoart <![CDATA[Obviously, a Bar Made of a Boeing 747 Engine Attracts Girls In the Skimpiest Dresses]]> Say whatever you want. It may be naff. It may be tacky. It may not attract buxom women in tiny black dresses. It will make me look like that guy. What. Evah. The Motoart PW-747 Cowling Bar rocks my world:

A world with ejection seat chairs, airplane piston engine tables, and a mirror bed made of wings, with a big-boobed blonde always by the side, preferably in a stewardess costume and semitransparent yellow lace lingerie. [Motoart via BornRich]

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<![CDATA[Bed Made of DC-9 Fins Lets You Join Mile High Club at Sea Level]]> A chair made of torpedo-launcher parts just wouldn't say "come hither" to techy ladies in the same way as this bed from Motoart. Dubbed Mile High, you can tell it's aimed at the sexier end of the geek furniture market, partly as it's marketed with a "a wonderful playground for you and your co-pilot" slogan, and especially when you notice the line of glowing red LEDs that pimp the frame's lower edge. The 11- by 7.5-foot bed is made of two DC-9 stabilizer fins and a C-130 inner flap. And if there's a particular aviator you want to attract between the sheets, you'll likely have to save up: it's price on application only, which generally means lots of dollars. [MotoArt via TFTS]

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<![CDATA[Furniture Made From Airplanes Lets Your Social Life Take Off]]> MotoArt is a company that builds custom furniture out of old airplane parts, turning a B-25 wing into a desk or a DC-3 propeller into a martini table. They're the perfect way to tell your guests that you have trouble enjoying things that aren't engine and motor related. Oh, and they're also good for telling your guests that you're loaded, as these things aren't cheap. That wing desk is $10,000 for example, and you need to fill in a form on the site to get a full price list. I'll stick to Ikea, thanks.

Product Page [via Book of Joe]

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