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  1. Photograph: Courtesy The Bunny Museum
    Photograph: Courtesy The Bunny MuseumThe Bunny Museum
  2. Photograph: Courtesy The Bunny Museum
    Photograph: Courtesy The Bunny MuseumThe Bunny Museum
  3. Photograph: Courtesy The Bunny Museum
    Photograph: Courtesy The Bunny MuseumThe Bunny Museum
  4. Photograph: Courtesy The Bunny Museum
    Photograph: Courtesy The Bunny MuseumThe Bunny Museum
  5. Photograph: Courtesy The Bunny Museum
    Photograph: Courtesy The Bunny MuseumThe Bunny Museum
  6. Photograph: Courtesy The Bunny Museum
    Photograph: Courtesy The Bunny MuseumThe Bunny Museum
  7. Photograph: Courtesy The Bunny Museum
    Photograph: Courtesy The Bunny MuseumThe Bunny Museum
  8. Photograph: Courtesy The Bunny Museum
    Photograph: Courtesy The Bunny MuseumThe Bunny Museum

The Bunny Museum

Want to see over 30,000 bunny tchotchkes stuffed into one lil' house in Pasadena? We thought you might.

Written by
Kate Wertheimer
&
Jakob N. Layman
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If you're looking to spend some time in a museum that's not like the others, check out the bigger and improved Bunny Museum. Los Angeles' hare enthusiasts Candace Frazee and her husband Steve Lubanski have relocated their one of a kind joint to a much larger location in Altadena. In addition to the thousands of bunny artifacts that they've collected over the years, including actual freeze-dried bunnies, there now exists a bunny library. The space also features nine Rose Parade float bunnies and a creepy room called the "Chamber of Hop Horrors" for ages 13 and above. If your kids aren't into seeing dead animals, there's plenty of kid-friendly attractions in other parts of the house. Admission is $8 and some treats for the live bunnies in residence. They prefer you donate something other than carrots, since that's what people usually bring.

 

RECOMMENDED: Easter in Los Angeles

 

Follow Kate on Instagram and Jakob on Twitter: @kate_em_up and @meetjakob

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