That’s the sound a rooster makes in Japanese. Here’s MisaQa with another batch of her great brick-built birds:
Yearly Archives: 2006
Legohaulic’s Flare-S Swoop
Minifigs of Mordor – custom Lord of the Rings minifigs
I made so many Lord of the Rings minifigs that I have to split them into two posts. Minifigs of Middle Earth was the first, and you’re reading the second, rather darker post.
The Dark Lord Sauron:
Sauron’s Ringwraiths, or Nazgul:
Saruman’s Uruk-Hai:
A bunch of motley goblins, or orcs:
Some evil men, the Haradrim:
A Haradrim oliphaunt-driver, and Grima Wormtongue:
And finally, Gollum:
Minifigs of Middle Earth – custom Lord of the Rings minifigs
Well, I got stuck trying to make more musical minifigs, so I’ve revamped the Lord of the Rings minifigs I uploaded to Brickshelf a couple summers ago.
First up, the Fellowship (Flickr photoset includes individual shots and alternate versions):
Arwen and Elrond:
Galadriel and Bilbo Baggins:
Faramir and Eowyn:
Theoden and Eomer:
Next up, Minifigs of Mordor!
Rock on, my little Norse dudes!
How cool is that?
Jonathan Coulton is a musician who releases his songs under a Creative Commons license, just as I do with my LEGO pictures and blog content. The idea is that you allow other people to use your creations (music, artwork, text, etc.) as part of their own creative work. The type of CC license Jonathan and I use is called Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5. That means you can copy and redistribute my work, as long as you give me credit, don’t use it for commercial purposes, and re-release your work under the same license.
When I changed my blog content and LEGO pictures from a standard copyright to a Creative Commons license, I never thought someone would actually use it, so it’s nice to know the system works. Thanks to Classic-Castler Sir Dillon for sending me a link to the video!
Now I’m off to build Jonathan in minifig form so he can join the rest of my musical minifigs. ;-)
Finally, some more links for you to click:
- Original Norse deity post here on TBB
- Blog post on The Jonathan Coulton Project
- Blog post on Jonathan Coulton’s official site
News Roundup: Week of June 18, 2006
It’s been a busy week of LEGO-related news.
The good:
- Microsoft Announces Robotics Studio (via The NXT STEP)
- LEGO and Microsoft Enter Robotics Collaboration (via The NXT STEP)
- South African LEGO ad wins print category in major competition (via TWENTY FOUR)
The bad:
The ugly:
I work alone, understand? Alone.
Nelson Yrizarry mentioned recently that he has a bit of extra time on his hands. This is a wonderful thing for all of us, because he’s posted sixteen vignettes based on Spider-Man (I’m hoping Nelson will re-post some of the great minifigs separately).
Possibly lost in the Spider-Vig hubbub is a wonderful vignette based on the 1994 movie The Professional starring French actor Jean Reno, alongside Natalie Portman in her debut role (click for gallery):
Here’s Léon with his rather formidable sniper rifle:
Heavy Swiss Freighter Titan by Jerac
Classic-Spacer Jerac (who, it turns out, isn’t Swiss after all) has posted another awesome entry in his fleet of micro-scale Swiss-themed space ships, the Titan freighter (click for gallery):
The awesome bridge:
A smaller container that slides in and out of the freighter (labeled “7”), which clamps onto the bigger, black container shown in the first picture:
MEGA MAID!
An incident waiting to happen...
Jacob C., a member of Classic-Castle, has posted an incredible bridge:
This bridge blew me away. First, the size of it. Its huge! But what really makes it great is the level of architectural detail. Incredible! Hopefully those two guards facing off on the bridge are pretty laid back…this could get nasty!
Here’s the big bridge gallery
Mike Psiaki’s Adventurers Truck
There’s no question Mike Psiaki builds cool stuff. I just wasn’t expecting what I found when I clicked the thumbnail for this Adventurers-inspired truck:
I won’t say anything more so as not to spoil the surprise. ;-)
Thekla’s Old-Fashioned Car
Brickshelfer and 1000steine.de member Thekla brings us a classic automobile: