Made You Smile (17 Photos)
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Ordinary streets get funnier when artists let walls, lamps, pipes, shadows, and statues join the joke.
A fresh mix of murals, small interventions, sculptures, and street surprises from around the world — all built around a clever visual twist.

Cats and a Lamp Post — By Woskerski in Larne, Northern Ireland
Two ginger cats are painted on the side of Ruby’s Bodega. In Woskerski’s post from the Larne paint jam organized by Seedhead Arts, one cat sits while the other reaches toward the real lamp post — now the best toy on the street. More: 9 Times WOSKerski Made UK Walls Feel Like Glitches in Reality
💡 Nerd Fact: WOSKerski’s range is wider than one playful wall: Seedhead Arts’ artist bio says his art journey began in 1997 and spans photorealistic portraits, graffiti, typography, food illustration, abstraction, and digital illustration.
🔗 Follow Woskerski on Instagram

“Cane E’(t)Tore” — By Giulio Masieri in Torre, Pordenone, Italy
A reclining dog stretches across a wall on Via Generale Antonio Cantore in Torre. Associazione Torre maps the work as Et-tore, the first mural in the AnimaLeVie series, made in 2020. At that scale, the man standing nearby looks tiny.
💡 Nerd Fact: The name came from the neighborhood, not a gallery label: Associazione Torre says the first dog mural was inaugurated on July 18, 2020, measured about 30 square meters, and was quickly nicknamed “E’(t)Tore” by passers-by.
🔗 Follow Giulio Masieri on Instagram

R2-D2 With Flowers — By EFIX in France
R2-D2 stands beside a trash can with flowers and a heart, as if he has arrived with a gift. A small Star Wars moment for a very ordinary bin.
💡 Nerd Fact: R2-D2’s name started as studio shorthand, not sci-fi mythology: Lucasfilm traces it to “Reel 2, Dialog 2” during the sound mix for American Graffiti, when George Lucas liked the sound of the label.
🔗 Follow EFIX on Instagram

Sidewalk & Shadow Art Project — By Damon Belanger in Redwood City, California, USA
A painted black shadow beside a mailbox becomes a toothy little monster. The City of Redwood City identifies the wider installation as its Sidewalk & Shadow Art Project: 20 sidewalk shadow-art stencils by local artist Damon Belanger, installed with the Redwood City Improvement Association. Same mailbox, much funnier shadow. More: Funny Fake Shadows! (20 Photos)
💡 Nerd Fact: This was funded like civic design, not just a street gag: the City of Redwood City says the Improvement Association donated $30,000 for downtown public art, and Belanger was hand-selected after renderings and interviews.
🔗 Follow Damon Belanger on Instagram

Flashlight Beam — By Golsa Golchini in Milan, Italy
A small painted child holds a flashlight near a wall corner. The real line of light does the rest, turning the beam into part of the painting. More: You Might Walk Past These—But They’re Tiny Masterpieces in Disguise
💡 Nerd Fact: Golchini’s tiny street scenes come from a formal art background: her artist bio lists her as Tehran-born, Milan-based, and a 2010 graduate of the Accademia di Belle Arti di Brera’s visual arts department.
🔗 Follow Golsa Golchini on Instagram

Googly-Eye Bollards — By Vanyu Krastev in Bulgaria
Cracked concrete bollards get googly eyes and start looking like Pac-Man characters along the sidewalk. Krastev’s Eyebombing Bulgaria project gives the idea a name: two plastic eyes, one broken object, instant personality. More: Googly-Eyed Art (17 Photos)
💡 Nerd Fact: “Eyebombing” has its own tiny rulebook: co-creator Kim Nielsen says the practice uses only googly eyes, happens in public urban spaces, and should be non-destructive and easily removable.
🔗 Follow Vanyu Krastev on Instagram

Nadine and the Last Autumnal Swimmer — By David Zinn in Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA
A small green chalk creature swims in a tiled pool tucked into a square of pavement. In Zinn’s own post, the work is captioned “Nadine and the Last Autumnal Swimmer”; fallen leaves frame the scene, and a mouse waits on the ledge. More: Beautiful Autumn By David Zinn! (9 Photos)
💡 Nerd Fact: Zinn’s sidewalk creatures are built to disappear: his artist bio says his temporary street drawings are made entirely from chalk, charcoal, and found objects, and are improvised on location.
🔗 Follow David Zinn on Instagram

Playing With Statues — Shamian Park, Guangzhou, China
A real child joins a bronze procession in Shamian Park, Guangzhou. China Daily describes the sculpture as a young governess playing violin with children following her; in this photo, the living child completes the line. More: Playing With Statues (25 photos)
💡 Nerd Fact: The sculpture has a hidden emotional key: in China Daily’s description, the children following the violinist are blind, so the music is not just decoration — it is how the group is being guided.

Pipe Shoes
Simple chalk outlines turn wall pipes into a row of legs in colorful shoes.

“PINK FLAMINGO” — By Tom Bob in New Bedford, Massachusetts, USA
A New Bedford Economic Development Council article places the gas-meter flamingo at the George Kirby Jr. Paint Co. building on Mt. Vernon Street. Tom Bob shared the piece as “PINK FLAMINGO”: a gas meter and its pipes painted pink and folded into the bird’s body, neck, and legs. The hardware does most of the posing. More Tom Bob: 33 Artworks by Creative Genius Tom Bob (That Will Make You Smile)
💡 Nerd Fact: The flamingo is perched on a very old paint story: Kirby Paint says its family marine-paint business began in 1846 on New Bedford’s historic waterfront and became one of the first makers of copper bottom paint for boat hulls.
🔗 Follow Tom Bob on Instagram

Face in the Ruin — By Nikita Nomerz
A derelict brick structure gets eyes and an open mouth painted around its existing holes. It fits Nikita Nomerz’s site-specific practice, where the wall’s own material, scars, and surroundings become part of the work. Not every ruin needs a renovation. Some just need a face. More: 17 Times Nikita Nomerz Brought Walls to Life
💡 Nerd Fact: Nomerz is not only painting faces on ruins: Inloco Gallery notes that his “Living Walls” project made him widely known in 2012, and that he later founded the MESTO international street art festival in Nizhny Novgorod in 2017.

The Light Is All Around — By Endo in Čačak, Serbia
Painted around a real streetlamp at Trg Narodnog Ustanka 8 in Čačak, the mural shows an elderly man smiling as he holds the pole like a glowing staff. Street Art Cities lists it as Endo’s The light is all around. The lamp does the lighting. More photos: The Light Is All Around in Čačak, Serbia
💡 Nerd Fact: Čačak has become a serious mural stop: the European Festivals Association’s FestivalFinder says DUK Festival helped give the city the title “City of Murals”, with 120+ murals by 93 international muralists.

“Vamos Compartilhar Amor!” — By Korea Graffiti in Belo Horizonte, Brazil
A smiling child pulls back a slingshot, but the shot is a bright red heart. In Korea Graffiti’s own reel, the artist describes the work as an invitation to spread positivity, respect, faith, and care for one another. The painted message says “Vamos Compartilhar Amor!” — let’s share love.
💡 Nerd Fact: UAI Graffiti was not a tiny side event: Estado de Minas reported that Belo Horizonte’s first Festival Internacional de Arte Urbana gathered more than 100 invited artists from across Brazil, with artists from Algeria, Japan, Argentina, and Chile also present at Escola Estadual Governador Milton Campos.
🔗 Follow Korea Graffiti on Instagram
🔗 Follow UAI Graffiti on Instagram

“Ride On” — By Alain Welter in Diekirch, Luxembourg
A grinning toad-like rider flies forward on a donkey while ducks, papers, reeds, and poppies spin around them. Painted at LCD – Den Dikrecher Kolléisch, the project was shared by the school as its new mural after two weeks of work; Welter posted it as “Ride On,” Diekirch, 2026. Big, busy, and friendly without behaving for a second.
💡 Nerd Fact: The donkey is a local symbol: Diekirch’s tourist office calls the donkey the town mascot, linked to old stories about farmers using donkeys on the steep Herrenberg slopes.
🔗 Follow Alain Welter on Instagram
📷 Photo by Mich on Instagram

Fountain Acrobat — By Levalet in Paris, France
Levalet uses the stone fountain face as the middle of a body. The pasted arms and legs cling to it as if the building has gotten itself stuck in a handstand.
💡 Nerd Fact: Levalet is the working name of Charles Leval, and Urban Nation notes that he grew up in Guadeloupe before studying visual arts in Strasbourg; his public-space figures are drawn in Chinese ink before they meet the street.
🔗 Follow Levalet on Facebook
📷 Photo by lepublicnme on Flickr

Little People, Big Snail — By Slinkachu in London, England
A real snail becomes the slowest armored vehicle in London. The tiny figure running ahead gives the pavement a chase scene. More: Little People in London, England
💡 Nerd Fact: This snail belongs to a mini-universe that began in 2006: Slinkachu’s own site calls the practice “abandoning miniatures since 2006,” and Street Art London notes that his Inner City Snail series sent customized London snails back into the world.
🔗 Follow Slinkachu on Facebook
🔗 Visit Slinkachu’s Little People project

Make Her Laugh — Chorley, England
The message is sweet, rough, and direct: make her laugh. Simple stencil figures on a worn wall make it feel more like a found note than a polished mural.
📷 Photo by Paul Speight on Flickr
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All are very good
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@streetartutopia I used to work in Redwood City and loved seeing the whimsical shadow art along my commute walking through downtown. Thanks for sharing! There are also some fun murals in Palo Alto that recently got refreshed.
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