Yearly Archives: 2006

Malle Hawking’s LEGO USS Harry S. Truman aircraft carrier is 16 feet long

German builder Malle Hawking (Weebleleezer on Brickshelf) has been working on a minifigure-scale LEGO model of the US Navy aircraft carrier Harry S. Truman (CVN-75). My friends and coworkers have been sending around e-mails with links to a site that has a few pictures of this huge ship, but doesn’t have much information — not even the name of the builder — so I did a bit of digging, found the builder on Brickshelf, and contacted him to find out a bit more about his massive project.

LEGO Harry S. Truman aircraft carrier

See more of this huge LEGO aircraft carrier

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HGDebris Blows Up a Microscale City

Here we have HGDebris’ wonderful microscale city:

And then it blows up:

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Big Ole 1656

Until LEGO released the line of big construction equipment last year, LEGO vehicles were always on the rediculously tiny side. Set 1656 Evacuation Team (released in 1991) was no exception:

Pierre Normandin and Steven Asbury have recreated this set at a scale more appropriate to the size of our beloved minifigs:

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Mina the Weapon-Bunny of the Moon by nias

A miniseries on TV in Japan called “Densha Otoko” (“Train Man”) told the story of a geek who helped a woman harrassed by a drunk on the train. As a window into Japanese geek (otaku) culture, it also included snippets of the protagonist’s favorite anime, a fake show called “Getsumen To Heiki Mina” (“Mina the Weapon-Bunny of the Moon”; rabbits live on the moon — didn’t you know?).

Brickshelf user nias has built an adorable Mina, complete with her double-carrot tails (or whatever they are):

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Firefighting Suit by Moko

Moko seems to be into power armor lately. Here’s a “Firefighting Suit”:

Perhaps this firefighter can help out the dude getting blown up (titled “Kaboom!”):

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Combat Suit by Moko

A while back I blogged about a power suit built by Brickshelf user drabadon. Now, Moko has joined the power suit club with his “Combat Suit” (apparently inspired by squieu’s Oratoku creations):

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Invidia

Name: Invidia
Mission: Making everything his own.
Origin: Evolved from the frog that the princess didn’t kiss.
Evil superpowers: Senses jealousy and envy in his opponents and twists those feelings to his advantage.
Notes: I made this one to express my jealousy that a certain Classic-Castle Forums member (and fellow Washingtonian) was bequeathed a large quantity of older LEGO sets. I was green with envy, thus Invidia.

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If Santa Traded in His Reindeer...

…he might have to ride a bicycle instead (from nias):

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Hello Kitty by nias

Brickshelf user nias recently reorganized some photos, and several things caught my eye (more posts to come).

Here’s Hello Kitty:

So, what’s the deal with Hello Kitty? Brian McVeigh thinks he has the answer in an article titled “How Hello Kitty Commodifies the Cute, Cool and Camp: ‘Consumutopia’ versus ‘Control’ in Japan.” The summary:

Asked about Hello Kitty, respondents judged those interested in this ‘character good’ within a framework of freedom/self-autonomy versus coercion/compulsion. The former is associated with what may be termed ‘consumutopia’ (a counter-presence to mundane reality fueled by late capitalism, pop culture industry, consumerism), while the latter is connected to ‘control’, a critical view of self/collective relations that also comments on Japanese ethno-identity. Hello Kitty also demonstrates the need to focus not just on different tastes within a society, but also on ambiguous and diverse attitudes within the same individual. Such diversity allows Sanrio, Hello Kitty’s maker, to link within one individual different modes of self-presentation, chronologically corresponding to girlhood (‘cute’), female adolescence (‘cool’), and womanhood (‘camp’). Thus, as people mature, appeals to nostalgia encourage a reconnection with the past by buying products united by one leitmotif; same commodity, same individual, different ages/tastes/styles/desires.

ROTFLMAO! Absolutely hilarious, or not. :-/

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It’s Graduation Time!

The Japanese school year begins in April and ends in March, with a one-month summer break and a short winter break over New Years. (Just for comparison, elementary school students go to school 240 days a year, compared to 180 days in the United States.) Since it’s mid-March, it’s graduation time! Sixth-graders are graduating from elementary school, ninth-graders from middle school, and so on.

To honor graduating students, Mumu presents a vignette:

And younger LEGO builder Legokou celebrates his own graduation from sixth grade:

Mumu’s caps and gowns are really nice, but what I like about Legokou’s version is that he includes cherry blossoms (always associated with graduation) and the black canister in which each student receives their diploma.

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Kwun Yam Temple

Taking another break from our usual Japanese fare, Brickshelf user Legokinsfolk presents Kwun Yam Temple. Here’s what Legokinsfolk has to say:

There is the Goddess of Mercy in the Kwun Yam Temple. The Goddess of Mercy has power to assume any shape to save those in distress. She is one of the most popular buddhas for her kindness among Chinese people.

An overview of the temple:

And my personal favorite, Kwun Yam herself:

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Of Croissants and Geese

The latest updates to marakoeschtra’s ongoing series of castle characters are a baker (yes, that’s a LEGO croissant), and a gooseherd, with an absolutely fantastic gaggle of geese:

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