World records: The world's largest drawing and other amazing featsPublished21 November 2019Image source, Sam Brill Image caption, Scottish illustrator Johanna Basford has broken the world record for the largest solo drawing! She completed her masterpiece using pencil and black marker on her own in the gym hall of her old school in Scotland. The drawing is of lots of different flowers and she drew it in less than 12 hours. Johanna hopes her achievement will inspire others to be creative too.Image source, Guinness World RecordsImage caption, In 2016, The Wildlife Conservation Society broke the world record for the most origami elephants displayed. There were 78,564 paper elephants made which were put on show at the Bronx Zoo in New York.Image source, Guinness World RecordsImage caption, In October 2016 the largest anamorphic (it looks different from different angles) pavement art was drawn by Yang Yongchun from China. At 391.93m long, it didn't just break the world record for the largest anamorphic painting, but the longest one too!Image source, Guinness World RecordsImage caption, In June 2019, after two whole years, sculptors in Germany broke the record for the world's tallest sandcastle. The huge castle took three and half days to make and 12 sculptors and eight technicians. They used 11,000 tonnes of sand and it stood at about 26m tall!Image source, Guinness World RecordsImage caption, In January 2018 Mother India's Crochet Queens broke the world record for the largest display of crochet figures. There were 58,917 items displayed in total. Crocheted items were collected from all over India and the world. The theme of this display was 'Go Green, Save the Earth'.Image source, Guinness World RecordsImage caption, In 2018 Federico Delgado Heredia from Uruguay painted the world's largest painting using coffee. It took seven hours to complete and was named "No tomes una mala decision , tomemos un cafe" which translates to "Don't make a bad decision, let's have coffee".More on this storyIn pictures: Amazing buildingsPublished11 January 2019World Peace Day: Is this what peace looks like?Published21 September 2019