As the saying goes: the constant dripping wears out the stone. This is certainly the case in the following examples. Due to constant wear and tear over the years, they have long since lost their original shape – but have acquired an interesting aesthetic as a result.
On the other hand, you do not have to wait long years. You get the results here:
After all, speaks for many customers.
The door is worn over and over by the bell.
How many people and how many years does it take for a stone staircase to look like this?
This is what happens when a monk prays in the same place for 20 years.
Here’s the whole story.
The teddy bear on the left seems to have been through a lot.
The user writes about it: «When my brother was born in 1985, my mother bought two identical stuffed animals. The left one has been my brother’s for 30 years, the right one has been saved for my brother’s first child born today.”
If you are patient, you can create a new pattern every 16 years.
The user writes: “My parents laid a carpet for the first time in years. That’s what 16 years of sunlight does to hardwood floors.”
The life cycle of a penny.
The amount is the same. However, one batch is fresh off the press, the other has been in circulation for years.
Tourism is showing its traces.
The worn marble staircase leading to the top of the Leaning Tower of Pisa.
Must be in divorce court.
Is this because of regular customers?
Never underestimate the power of…paper?!
This multifunctional device was used so intensively that over time the paper “cut” the plastic.
No, that’s not a shadow…
The user wrote: «My father’s living room after the photos were deleted. Yes, he was a chain smoker.”
We really didn’t want to know.
A 15 year old buildup of rust in a 1 inch water pipe.
Someone relies on his position play.
It must surely be a lucky coin if he hasn’t lost it in all these years.
The user writes: “My grandfather carried this silver dollar in his pocket since 1952.”
How safe is this swing?
It is, of course, the quickest way from one room to another.
You can take some money in your hands to replace the handle.
This handle in a science museum was filmed for 15 years before it was replaced.
Four people had a lot of fun here… and for a long time.
Dominoes were played on this table.
Hard to believe it’s the same house.
Do you feel the risk of slipping when wet?
This diamond steel plate in an amusement park was worn down by the shoes.
Back to the future.
The floor for a restaurant cash register was opened in 1924.