Barney Main (SlyOwl) built a floating rock sculpted in complex angles. There have been a few notable instances of this technique used, but it has never been applied to a floating rock due to the instability of angling the bricks. Here is the technique he used.
Yearly Archives: 2012
Collectible Minifigs Series 6 Debut as TV Stars
LEGO has released this hilarious video introducing all the new minifigs in the sixth Series of Collectible Minifigs, set up as a parody of some well-known American TV shows. I enjoyed it, and I think you will too.
Dissecting the new LEGO Friends mini-dolls [Guest Post]
Minifig customizer and friend of the blog Catsy shared a write-up about attempting some customizations on the new LEGO Friends mini-dolls on the SEALUG mailing list, and he graciously agreed to let us share it here as well.
This is the result of about half an hour or so of experimenting with the mini-dolls from the new Lego “Friends” line, and introducing them to my good friends Hobby Knife, Razor Saw, and Pin Vise.
Some findings, in no particular order (not all of which is new information):
- The single-piece legs are not actually joined at their hinge point–instead there are two small nubs (one of which you can see on the left leg here) which fit into dimples in the waist. I am pretty sure that I can modify them to move independently, but it’ll be challenging–and given the modifications needed, only really feasible if you’re going to repaint the legs entirely to repair the damage.
- It was near-impossible to pull the legs off–I sawed through them where they join above the knees.
- The tab that connects the waist to the torso is completely incompatible with any standard System connection I’ve tried. It’s too big on the long axis to fit in a stud hole, and too big on the short axis to be gripped by a minifig hand or clip without stress. The only thing I’ve been able to make happen is fitting it diagonally into the bottom of a 1×1 brick. I may try removing it entirely and replacing the connection with a bar.
- The torso is completely hollow, with no internal reinforcement–it’s simply a receiver for the waist tab.
- The arms are easier to get in and out than minifig arms–you can see the stepped peg on the left arm above. I suspect these may get loose over time easier than minifig arms as well.
- The hands are not angled forward the way a minifig’s are–so accessories with a pronounced rake to them may not look as expected.
- The lack of wrist articulation is extremely limiting in terms of how you can pose them with accessories. The arms are only slightly bigger in diameter than the attachment posts on minifig hands, so I can’t simply cut off the hand and drill a hole for a minifig hand. I am, however, fairly certain I can graft on a hand in a way that allows full rotation.
- The stud connection point on the feet is in the front, under the doll’s center of gravity and more or less directly under the body. The feet are slightly oblong.
- The legs have a very slight backward sweep on the way down, which you can see most clearly on the right leg above. The upshot of this is that it is impossible for a mini-doll to stand on any 1×2 area that has anything immediately behind them. To test this, take a 2×2 brick or plate, and put a 1×2 plate on it. Then try to make the mini-doll stand on the 2×2 piece.
- The neck is a standard 3mm bar connection rather than stud-width like a minifig neck–the heads are incompatible with minifig torsos. You can easily get most neckwear on them, but the connection is loose and most torso armor/vests are so oversized it looks like a kid playing dress-up.
- The head is approximately the same dimensions at the top as a minifig head, but tapers towards the chin in a roughly egg-like way. The eyes have a slight hollow to them, and there is a nose that protrudes. Everything else is printing. The stud on the top is hollow, and the hole for the neck is–as mentioned above–a 3mm bar connection.
- The nose causes complications with some fully-enclosed headwear, but not most. The chin extends lower than a minifig’s chin, so that headwear with “chin straps” obscures the mouth.
- The hair is interchangeable with minifigs–and many TLC minifig hairpieces look quite good on the girls. A few are dodgy–the long blonde hair with tresses that drape over a minifig’s shoulder, for example, looks a little odd. The main difference is that it is made out of the same kind of soft plastic as the Exo-Force hair, and has tiny holes on the top and side of the hairpiece that go all the way through, allowing the attachment of hair accessories.
- Brickarms helmets work extremely well and look great. I do NOT recommend trying to use aftermarket hairpieces, however–I tried putting a third-party hairpiece on one of them and had to use pliers to get the head back out.
Thanks, Catsy! Mike Yoder has also taken a crack at customizing these new figs, with some pretty badass results.
The Imperial Chinese Navy takes to the stars
I alluded to the opposing force that inspired my own microscale battle fleet, but it looks like I didn’t end up blogging Mike Yoder‘s fleet on its own. Well, this wonderful new poster created for Mike by Stijn gives me a great excuse to do so.
All of Mike’s ships have a consistent design that visually places them within the same faction, while each vessel has a unique style of its own. I just love the little fighters!
Colossal Castle Contest IX Roundup
There were a ton of simply amazing entries this year into Classic-Castle‘s annual contest. I tell myself each year I’m going to blog all of my favorites, and every year there are so many I fall drastically behind.
But! For your viewing pleasure, some of my favorites. I’m so glad I’m not judging.
In no particular order:
Fiant’s Lord of the North:
Koffiemoc‘s Maison de la Motte
Shmail‘s San Kastel
Noah McClung‘s Operation “Chimney Sweep”
Lolino‘s Secret of the Holy Grail
Jovian (Steve Vargo)’s Enchanted Waters
busboy489’s Castle New Hope
Stormbringer’s Frost Dragon Attack from Skyrim
Fantastic Porsche 917 Model by Malte Dorowski
The Porsche 917’s sweeping curves and smooth shape make it particularly challenging to translate into Lego, but Malte Dorowski has managed to accomplish it quite admirably, using some clever techniques and a great deal of skill. He has even managed to work in an opening engine compartment and functioning doors, and his presentation does his creation justice.
Be sure to also check out his beautiful Porsche 911 GT1.
The Urban Transit of a More Elegant Age
Amacher Sylvain (aka captainsmog) is no stranger to this blog, and yet again his newest steampunk creation is simply delightful. This time it’s an elevated monorail of the most opulent style. The soot-coloured station and bare girders wonderfully balance the polished wood and ornate embellishments of the car itself, providing a lovely little diorama.
FBTB launches Studs comic
FBTB is starting a comic strip called Studs, and their first one plays off the drama of the new LEGO Friends line.
I got stripes
I’ve been having fun lately looking at concept art books by the likes of Chris Foss, whose garishly striped ships have enhanced the covers of science fiction novels for nearly 40 years.
There’s a certain challenge in trying to recreate somebody else’s design (including historical vehicles and vessels), but I feel most creative when I build something completely my own. After poring over Hardware: The Definitive SF Works of Chris Foss a couple of times, I set it aside for a few weeks before trying to build anything inspired by the artist’s unique aesthetic. The little cargo ship below is what emerged on New Year’s Day.
Next, I set myself a challenge to build something less vertically oriented — bricks stacked on bricks. Even though the build was much more complicated, I prefer my finished spaceships safely swooshable, and just don’t feel like the gunship below would be safe to hand to the nine-year-old who lives in my head.
Nevertheless, the gunship was a fun build, and I may reuse the front part for something different (more in line with my existing microscale fleet).
Raid on New San Diego
Most of the mecha we feature here on The Brothers Brick are standalone LEGO models all on their own. knobbyplastic goes farther to incorporate his menacing mecha into a diorama.
The crack going through the wall and windows on the gray building is a nice detail, as is the broken railing. The mecha doesn’t even take the central place in the photo, standing off to the side as if waiting to pounce. It’s an excellent composition, with a great balance between light and dark that draws the eye to the mecha even though the mecha isn’t in the middle of the picture.
Lego Shaun of the Dead at the Winchester
Greg’s (Yatkuu) Lego creation of Shaun and the gang in front of the Winchester couldn’t get any classier. It won’t be complete without some zombie bashing.
Happy Year of the Dragon!
Something I look forward to every New Year’s Day is the lovely LEGO creations by Japanese builders celebrating the new year, most often incorporating the animal from the Chinese Zodiac. I generally wait a couple days and do a roundup, but Moko‘s dragon is too gorgeous to share later.
(And since we get at least one comment about this every year, Japan celebrates New Year’s on January 1st every year. Chinese New Year is based on the lunar calendar, the exact date varies by year, and is celebrated by many other Asian cultures. Just not Japan.)