The World Record of ‘most people wearing christmas jumpers’ has been achieved by Loughborough University from Leicestershire, UK.
On December 10, 2014 during an event One Thousand One Hundred Seventy Five (1175) people wore the Christmas jumpers. The record was coordinated by the Loughborough Students’ Union.
The World Record of ‘largest number of twin births in a city’ has been achieved by Linha Sao Pedro from Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil.
Cândido Godói is a municipality of 6,641 inhabitants in Brazil near the Argentine border it has set a record of the high number of twins born. The twin phenomenon is centered in Linha São Pedro, a small settlement in the city of Cândido Godói, in an ethnically homogeneous population of German descent.
The World Record of ‘most drawings in an hour (group)’ has been achieved by Lokmat Media Pvt. Ltd. from Aurangabad, Maharashtra, India.
On Sept 27, 2015; Lokmat, a leading news paper of Maharashtra organized the event in which group of seventeen children made Four Thousand Twenty Five (4025) drawings of lord Ganesha in an hour.
The World Record of ‘most people participating in aarti’ has been achieved by Dainik Bhaskar from Ujjain, Madhya Pradesh, India.
On March 20, 2016; Dainik Bhaskar: a leading news paper of India, organized the aarti of holy river Kshipra at Ramghat, Ujjain in which Thirty One Thousand Six Hundred Seventy Five (31675) people participated in the aarti.
The World Record of ‘most people in heart-shaped hand gesture’ has been jointly achieved by Allen Career Institute and AE from Kota, Rajasthan, India.
On Aug 15, 2018; Sixteen Thousand Three Hundred (16300) people majorly science students of Allen Career Institute stood with heart-shaped hand gesture to express Happiness during Indian Independence Day celebration program.
The World Record of ‘largest human depiction of a boat’ has been achieved by Servier Industries Ltd., from Arklow, Ireland.
On Mar 27, 2015; Three Hundred Twenty Three (323) participants stood in the form of a boat. The boat was depicted by the participants wearing blue and green poncho to indicate the hull and sail of the boat.