Yearly Archives: 2007

When Words Fail

Eric Brok It is with a heavy heart that I write of the passing of Eric Brok, the LEGO fan who designed 10190 Market Street. He succumbed in his sleep after a battle with cancer. For more than ten years, Eric has served as an inspiration to the worldwide LEGO community. Our thoughts go out to his wife, family, friends, and everyone who had the opportunity to meet him.

We’ll leave this post up for a few days — now doesn’t seem to be the time for mecha, ninjas, and interstellar starfighters. If we learn of anything the community can do for his family, we’ll let you know.

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How to Spot a Pirate

What’s wrong with this picture?

The answer is that these are a brand of construction toys from China called “Enlighten.” No, they’re not LEGO® brand building bricks. What’s the difference between Enlighten and construction toy brands that advertise themselves as “compatible with the leading brand,” such as Mega Bloks, Best-Lock, and Tyco? These latter companies all design and sell unique sets with distinct figures, while Enlighten manufactures almost-exact copies of LEGO sets with direct copies of the LEGO minifigure. Bear in mind that set designs are copyrighted, and that the LEGO minifigure is trademarked. In other words, Enlighten products are illegal.

So, pirated pirates? Yes indeed. To spot the differences, note that LEGO never produced chrome cutlasses, chrome flintlocks, brown rifles, yellow parrots, or wizard beards that don’t cover the minifig’s mouth. Of course, most Enlighten boxed sets we’ve seen aren’t labeled “LEGO,” so that makes spotting the pirate a bit easier.

If you’re traveling overseas and see some “cheap LEGO,” make sure you’re not buying illegally copied sets.

There, I’ve said my piece. Head on over to the Minifig Customization Network for an ongoing discussion.

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Step aside Johnny?

This could all just be hearsay, but a short article on CoolToyReview.com claims LEGO will be producing sets based upon the upcoming Indiana Jones IV film.  Does this mean Johnny Thunder’s adventures are over?

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News: 10190 Market Street now available from the LEGO Store online

The “Cafe Corner neighbor” that’s been generating quite a bit of excitement lately is now available (without any notable fanfare and without a pre-order period) on LEGO Shop@Home:

Prices seem to vary by region: In Europe, it’s €89.99 (UK: £59.99); in the United States, it’s $89.99; and in Canada, it’s $130.

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Classic LEGO sets, microscaled!

A couple LEGO fans have been building microscale versions of classic LEGO sets lately.

Thomas Main gets things going with microscaled versions of several sets from the 1970s:

Nermal joins the trend with a microscale version of 6034 Black Monarch’s Ghost:

This is something I’ll have to try with my favorite childhood sets. :-D

(Via MicroBricks, and again.)

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Watari RideSuit by nori

I wonder if nori‘s ridesuit can only walk sideways…

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The latest from blackbulb creations

Nicholas Foo is a LEGO Certified Professional in Singapore who uses the trade name “blackbulb creations.” His creations on Brickshelf have always caught my eye (link):

His latest project is a large retro rocket:

Nicholas’ rocket is a central component of a massive “Great Ball Contraption” assembled by LEGO fans in Singapore. Here are a couple pictures from LEGO Ambassador Diana Wong:

You can see more pictures of this event on Brickshelf (gallery 1, gallery 2, gallery 3, gallery 4):

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Building a geodesic dome on the moon, one Shpleem at a time

Jon Palmer, recently returned to the sunny Pacific Northwest after a stint as a model builder at LEGOLAND, took a fairly large geodesic dome to BrickFest 2006:

It’s easy to miss specific creations in photos from LEGO conventions, so I’m happy that Jon has been posting pictures on Flickr.

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They must put something in the water in Poland...

Perhaps it’s simply because we have hippotam (and now nexus7) over at Klocki to tell us that certain builders are from Poland, or the near-sweep in the recent Castle Contest, but it seems like the worldwide LEGO community has taken notice of the Polish LEGO community in the last few months.

The latest builder I’ve learned is from Poland is Noddy.

In addition to a great series of bikes, don’t miss his retro-futuristic robots:

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Hither and yon aboard Mr. Zarki’s marvelous Mobile Throne

The pad to the rider’s left is apparently a “portable food synthesizer with voice command.” Heh heh, cool. Oh, and Tim “Spook” Zarki also posted a cool little hardsuit:

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To boldly bounce...

Olog's moon buggy

Sorry to stray from my usual territory but I had to highlight this one… Brickshelf user Olog (edit: Florea Adrian on flickr and presumably real life) creates an incredible moon rover for Aaron Sneary’s Moon Rover contest. The inverted tyres are great but my favourite part is using some old weird springy parts from soccer sets to do the suspension. Brilliant parts use.

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LEGO Gives Woordenaar Piece of Mind

You can also compare Woordenaar‘s creation to the original album art.

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