These black and white images of models and everyday household objects appear to be the work of a photographer – but there is more to them than meets the eye.
Amazingly, they are actually pencil drawings painstakingly created by a Japanese artist in a process taking hundreds of hours each.
Kohei Ohmori, 23, has depicted objects including a model vintage car and a screw bolt and shared them online, where he has amassed a huge audience.
He has also drawn an incredibly realistic depiction of American actress Scarlett Johansson, which also went down well on social media.
The artist’s brother shared some of his creations on Twitter, where he commented: ‘My little brother is amazing at drawing these precise pictures with pencil.
‘He was drawing this bolt and nut nonstop, and I could feel a little insanity from him. This one took him 240 hours (still not done). It’s not a photo.’
Kohei Ohmori, 23, spends hundreds of hours sketching pencil drawings that are so realistic they look like photographs. This image of a model took Mr Ohmori 250 hours to make. Mr Ohmori wrote as a caption: ‘Finished! Worn out’
The artist has also drawn an incredibly realistic depiction of American actress Scarlett Johansson, which also went down well on social media. One Instagram user commented, ‘so amazing’, while another wrote, ‘wow!!’
This sketch of a model with water running down her face took Mr Ohmori a total of 180 hours to make. Instagram users were impressed with one writing, ‘Damn it looks like a photo’. Another wrote: ‘You are extremely talented’
The artist’s brother shared some of his creations on Twitter, where he commented: ‘My little brother is amazing at drawing these precise pictures with pencil.’ This sketch shows a model vintage car
This drawing of a screw took Mr Ohmori 200 hours, prompting one of his social media followers to write, ‘You’ve got some serious patience right there’
The artist’s brother added: ‘He was drawing this bolt and nut nonstop, and I could feel a little insanity from him. This one took him 240 hours (still not done). It’s not a photo’