Richard Plaud, 47, said he spent eight years and 4,200 hours assembling 706,900 matches to build the world’s tallest structure made of matches, measured at 7.19m (23.6ft).

It would have been enough to beat the record that’s been held by Lebanese model maker Toufic Daher since 2009, who used six million matches to create an Eiffel Tower replica measuring at 6.53m (21.4ft).

But after completing his creation on 27 December, Mr Plaud said he submitted an application to Guinness World Records only for it to be rejected without even being looked at.

In a scathing social media post, Mr Plaud said the decision was a “great disappointment” and relayed the record company’s reasons for rejecting his work.

He said it was because the structure must be built from matches that are available to the public for purchase and don’t have flammable red tips - and they must “not be cut, disassembled or deformed to the point where they are no longer recognised” as matches.

Mr Plaud told French media outlet TFI he started off the tower with matches bought commercially, but became tired of having to cut off their red tips one by one, so ended up contacting the main French manufacturer to have the wooden rods delivered in 15kg boxes.

He says he did not know this would disqualify him from breaking the record.

Mr Plaud isn’t sure what he’ll do with the model now, he told TFI. He said his hope was to present it at the Olympics in Paris this summer, but that organisers told him “there was no room high enough to accommodate it”.

  • ᴇᴍᴘᴇʀᴏʀ 帝@feddit.ukOPM
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    9 months ago

    They have to be publicly available and not altered so much that they no longer resemble a match. So you basically get matches that are sold in shops and you can snip the tip off them but don’t mess around with them too much. He thought he could skip the tip cutting and get blank matches before they are given the top but such matches aren’t solid in shops because what would be the point?

    • 200ok@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      Sounds more like a world record in patience for cutting the most match heads off should be a separate category.