Perennial Blocklog favorite MisterZumbi presents the A-Team:
(Is that hair on Hannibal’s head painted white? Hmmm… We’ll let this one slide, because Mr. T is telling me to shut up now.)
Perennial Blocklog favorite MisterZumbi presents the A-Team:
(Is that hair on Hannibal’s head painted white? Hmmm… We’ll let this one slide, because Mr. T is telling me to shut up now.)
(Today we’ll be introducing Joe Vig to Japanese LEGO builders. For an English introduction to Joe, read all about him on LUGNET.)
Brickshelf や LUGNET のヴィネット作品で、Joe Vig(ジョー・ヴィグ)という人物を見かけることがあります。ジョー・ヴィグとは何者なのでしょうか?今日は普通の和英の説明に変わって、ジョー・ヴィグを日本のレゴファンの皆様にご紹介したいと思います
ジョーは世界一アンラッキーで周囲に無頓着なレゴキャラなのです。彼は常に周りで何が起ころうとしているのか、わかっていません。強烈な電磁石のように悪運を引きつけますが、危険意識はゼロ!しかし残念ながら、今にも悪いことがおころうとしています。気をつけろ、ジョー!
ジョー・ヴィグはマイク・クラウリー氏(Mike Crowley)およびイリザリ兄弟ネルソンとパトリック(Nelson and Patrick Yrizarry)の意図に基づいているものです。元のアイデアは単純なレゴフィグを作り、Joe Food(食べ物ジョー)と名付け、付近のレストランで写真を撮ることでした。その写真をウェブに載してあちらこちらで現れてることを見せびらかしたかったのです。
いろんなことが重なってジョー・ヴィグは LUGNET のヴィネット作品の登場人物になりました。その結果で名前を「ジョー・ヴィグ」に変えました。(「ヴィグ」は「ヴィネット」の省略で、もちろん実在・架空の人物の名前ではありません。)
ジョー・ヴィグのアイデアには好意的な反響が大きく、間もなく世界中のレゴファンがジョー・ヴィグのヴィネットを作り始めました。2005年の6月にLUGNET .vignette グループの管理者たちは第一回 [ジョー・ヴィグコンテスト] を開きました。将来もジョー・ヴィグを多くの作品で見ることを期待しています。
さて、皆さんも自分のヴィネットにジョー・ヴィグを使ってみませんか?

ジョーはもちろんアレンジにも気がつかない人物ですが、頭、胴、足は上記の部品を使用してください。また、ジョーは帽子をかぶるのが好きですが、色は”白”に限られています。
ジョーに何が起こるかはレゴファンの皆さん次第です。このプロジェクトの目的は創造力とヴィネット製作を啓蒙することですが、大事なのは楽しむこと!です。
それでは、ジョーに何かが起こる直前を表現したヴィネットを作りましょう!ジョーが気づいていない、ということに注意!
(ネルソンさんが LUGNET のために書いた文章をもとにこの記事を書きました。LUGNET の新しい 日本語版を編集して下さった Izzoさんにも大変有り難く思います。)
For those of you just joining us (welcome, BoingBoingers!), my other blog, Pan-Pacific Bricks, features cool LEGO creations from the many LEGO builders in Japan, along with a few of my own Japanese-themed creations. (I was born and raised in Japan.)
NOTE (2/25/06): Although I’m in the process of migrating my images to Flickr, there are still a fair amount of images hosted on a site called Brickshelf, which appears to be unstable at the moment. Check back later if you don’t see pictures in this post. (This is definitely going to make me switch to Flickr.)
My most recent set of creations is a series of minifigs based on historical and legendary people from Japan. Click the thumbnails to read more on Pan-Pacific Bricks:
Name: Kukai (空海) / Kobo Daishi (弘法大師 こうぼうだいし)
Dates: 774-835

Biography: Known after his death as Kobo Daishi, Kukai was the founder of Shingon-shu, one of the major sects of Japanese Buddhism. In 804, Kukai traveled to China, where he studied under Hui-kuo. Kukai returned to Japan in 806, bearing religious texts from various faiths. He founded a monastery at Mt. Koya outside Kyoto, where he was buried upon his death, and which continues to be the headquarters for Shingon Buddhism to this day.
Further reading:
Wikipedia (English), Wikipedia (日本語), Shingon Buddhist Int’l, Koyasan.org.
As an experiment, I uploaded a bunch of pictures to Flickr. The Flickr badge thingie in the nav bar on the right is kind of cool.
We’ll see what happens.

Name: Hattori Hanzou (服部半蔵 はっとりはんぞう)
Dates: 1541-1596
Biography: Member of the famous Iga Ninja clan, little is known about this mysterious man.
Further reading: Wikipedia (English), Wikipedia (日本語), Real Ultimate Power, Ninja Village
Flickr users are posting some really great LEGO creations lately. Brickshelf has some serious functional and technical limitations (folder descriptions can’t even include apostrophes, for example), and I’m starting to think that it might be worth posting on Flickr as well as Brickshelf (as several LEGO fans I know of currently do) — or even switching completely to Flickr. Anyway, that’s a discussion for another day.
Flickr user skinny coder has posted some totally sweet LEGO recreations of video games, including my current favorite game, Katamari Damacy for the PS2:
My wife and I have been playing nothing but the two Katamari games for the last three months or so. You know what’s funny (and a bit frustrating)? I have a King of All Cosmos minifig sitting next to a Prince minifig among my LEGO, waiting for me to create exactly what skinny coder made. Oh well…
The Japanese Girl’s Day festival (Hinamatsuri) has inspired a number of great creations recently, including two I’ve featured here on PPB — by Izzo and Nelson Yrizarry.
Mumu joins these builders with his own version:
I’ve enjoyed Jamie Neufeld’s minifig creations for some time, and I’m pleased to see that he’s still creating new characters:
Be sure to check out his other steampunk LEGO creations, including a steam-powered boat and giant wheel:
I’m conflicted and confused about the recent controversy (and violence) over a cartoon of Mohammed published last September in a Danish newspaper. I spent a summer during college working on an archaeological dig in Jordan, where I became good friends with many Muslims. I’m also a writer and card-carrying proponent of free speech.
But the boycotts are especially baffling. Here’s a quote from a recent article (via ILENN):
From Havarti cheese to Lego toys, Danish products have been yanked off the shelves of stores in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and other countries around the Middle East as Muslims await an apology for the cartoons, which the Copenhagen government has said it cannot give.
I realize that this is a complex issue. (Political cartoonist Mikhaela Reid provides a fairly balanced perspective, identifying the racist and xenophobic overtones of the original cartoon.) But punishing unrelated Danish companies like LEGO strikes me as an overreaction.
Should those of us in “the west” take to the streets, burn down the embassies of Muslim countries, and counter-boycott goods from such countries? No, absolutely not! But perhaps we can show our support for the right to free speech of artists and writers everywhere by buying a little extra Havarti and LEGO.
Just when you think LEGO builders have exhausted new minifig-building techniques, Uda-san gives us Cinderella with a glass slipper on her right foot and a bare left foot: