Lily Hevesh poses and smiles with her display made out of thousands of multicolored dominoes.

Artist Lily Hevesh built this 15-color spiral using 12,000 dominoes!

Courtesy of Lily Hevesh/Hevesh5

Standards

NGSS: Core Idea: PS3.B, ETS1.B

CCSS: Writing: 5

TEKS: Science: 3.6A, 4.6A, 5.6A. 6.8B; ELA: 3.6F, 3.11D, 4.6F, 4.11D, 5.6F, 5.11D, 6.5F, 6.10D

Domino Designer

Meet an artist who creates spectacular domino displays

Lily Hevesh fell in love with dominoes when she was 9 years old. “My grandparents had the classic 28-pack,” she says. Hevesh would arrange the tiny rectangles in curved or straight lines. Then she would flick the first domino and watch the whole display come tumbling down. 

Hevesh collected her own dominoes as she got older. In 2009, she started posting online videos of her domino designs. Today, at age 20, Hevesh is a professional domino artist. She is paid to create spectacular domino setups for movies, TV shows, and events. Recently, she used more than 7,000 dominoes to build a design for pop star Katy Perry! 

In 2017, Hevesh set a Guinness World Record for the most dominoes toppled in a circular shape: 76,017. “It’s super exciting to see your idea come to life—and then knock it down,” she says.

Designing a Display

Before she builds her domino displays. First, she thinks about the theme of the design. What does she want to communicate? Then she brainstorms colors, images, or words to include.

Next, Hevesh sketches out how she wants to arrange the dominoes. Sometimes she creates a grid that forms pictures, like emojis or logos, as it falls down. Other times, Hevesh constructs 3-D structures like domino towers or pyramids. 

When Hevesh figures out how many dominoes of each color she’ll need. Some creations require tens of thousands of dominoes. Instead of counting out each one by hand, she weighs them. That allows her to easily calculate whether she has enough of each type.

Hevesh tests each section of a display. She films the tests in slow motion. This helps her make corrections if something goes wrong. When each section works perfectly, she puts them all together.

Lily Hevesh builds her installation one domino at a time.

Scott Eisen/AP Images for Scholastic Inc.

Hevesh assembles a structure she built for Scholastic magazines. It’s made of 7,400 dominoes.

They All Fall Down

As Hevesh builds, she has to be careful. Dominoes standing upright are full of potential energy, or stored energy. Just one wrong move and the energy converts to kinetic energy, the energy of motion. When a domino falls, it transfers energy to the domino in front of it. That domino transfers energy to the next. One by one, all the pieces fall down.

To keep that from happening as she builds, Hevesh leaves out a few dominoes here and there. If she knocks something over, these “safety gaps” keep the setup from crashing down. 

Hevesh gets nervous before the final run. “No matter how much I’ve planned, there are always things that surprise me,” she says. “Once the last domino has toppled, I can finally celebrate and sigh in relief.”

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