Tag Archives: Minifigs

Everybody loves LEGO minifigures — well, almost everybody. Minifigs are often the stars of the LEGO models we feature here on The Brothers Brick, but we also feature some amazing custom minifigs you’d never expect to see in an official LEGO set.

Tokugawa Ieyasu by Nelson Yrizarry

My series of Japanese historical and legendary characters stalled when I couldn’t figure out how to make the shogun Tokugawa Ieyasu’s hat (image from Wikipedia; click to read Ieyasu’s biography):

Nelson Yrizarry has solved this problem with a unique combination of pieces, and I also like Nelson’s solution for a folded fan:

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Jamie Neufeld’s Crimson Skies Minifigs

Jamie Neufeld gets steampunk. He proves this by distilling the steampunk aesthetic down to minifig scale. For a building style that relies on hoses, gauges, boilers, and an overwhelming amount of detail, this is no small feat.

Here’s Jamie’s U.S. Air Cavalryman:

And his Zeppelin-robbing thief:

Head on over to Classic-Space.com to discuss Jamie’s creations.

(Thanks to Linus Bohman for the tip on this one.)

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Steve Bishop Ain’t Never Caught a Rabbit

Yes, he’s probably a hound dog, I wouldn’t call him “high-classed,” and I’m fairly confident he’s never caught a rabbit, but Steve Bishop has put the new Robin hair (from the Batcave set) to good use with an Elvis Presley minifig:

Also See Steve’s Elvis in a new vignette on Brickshelf, part of his ongoing “Great Moments in History” series.

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Star Trek: The Next Generation Minifigs

Here’s my non-decal take on the crew of NCC-1701-D Enterprise (click for full photoset on Flickr:

L to R: Deanna Troi, Worf, Data, Dr. Beverly Crusher, Jean-Luc Picard, Will Riker, Geordi LaForge, and Wesley Crusher.

Edit (6/10/06): I forgot to include my Borg drones when I first posted this:

Borg Drones

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Lukas’ Castley Minifigs

It’s always a pleasure to see someone get into minifig building, and Lukas W.P. has made a lot of these little dudes lately. Hurray!

Here’s his latest batch, a “Hammer Dude,” “Rascal,” “Knife Dude,” and “Gypsy”:

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Bohman’s Space Minifig Weapons

Using an interesting technique discussed in this thread on Classic-Space Forums, Linus Bohman presents a couple really cool minifig weapons:

(A quick “program note”: Bear with us as Josh and I get caught up on a few days of creations we’d like to highlight. I can’t speak for him, but all my LEGO time has been spent building — a good thing — and writing far-too-long blog posts. We’ll be getting back to our usual fare now.)

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Microsoft: A Day in the Life

My job rocks. Yesterday was by no means typical, but then no two days working for the world’s biggest software company are the same. Here’s my yesterday, warts and all.

6:30 AM: Wake up early so I can get to work in time for the 9:00 AM keynote address that kicks off this week’s “Engineering Excellence and Trustworthy Computing Forum” (EE&TwC). I wear my totally awesome Xbox T-shirt.

7:30 AM: Catch Metro 242 for Overlake. Write one poem and read half an issue of Poetry magazine. Listen to Green Day on my iPod. (Everybody at Microsoft has an iPod.)
8:30 AM: After passing the North American headquarters of my old employer, I arrive at the transit center in Redmond and catch a Microsoft shuttle to the Conference Center. (There’s a whole fleet of shuttles to get you from one end of the campus to the other. There are special shuttles for recruits. There are special shuttles for interns. It’s like the City of the Future.)

8:45 AM: Check in, get my conference ID and free T-shirt (my first Microsoft swag!). Bypass the free food, grab a free soda, and get a third-row seat for the keynote.
9:00 AM: Listening to the keynote by Jon DeVaan, I’m reminded why I love working for Microsoft: I’m surrounded by brilliant, passionate people from all over the world who genuinely seem to care about making the world a better place through technology.

9:50 AM: I’m getting antsy because I have a 10:00 meeting across campus at my building (tucked in some trees behind the world headquarters of this company).
10:00 AM: I decide to duck out because there doesn’t seem to be a break between the 9:00 AM and 10:00 AM sessions. I figure I’ll disrupt the fewest people by going four seats over, three rows down, and across the front of the room. Jon says, “I’m pleased to introduce Steve Ballmer!” So, I get to be the guy who stands up and leaves as a Senior VP introduces the CEO of Microsoft. Did I mention the TV cameras? Yeah, I’d forgotten about those.

12:15 PM My morning improved as I got some work done, and now I’m ready to meet some Japanese friends for lunch. Knowing I’m slammed, they’re kind enough to join me in the cafeteria in my building. The food at Microsoft isn’t half bad, and it’s cheap. If I don’t like the menu in my building, I can look up menus online and catch a shuttle to any of the other buildings. Today’s entree is Indian cuisine, so I choose palak paneer and daal with naan and samosas, swipe my badge at the register to pay, grab some more free soda, and get caught up with my friends. There are conversations going on in so many languages around me that nobody bats an eye at my Japanese (I’m used to fellow white people staring at me). Yup, this is the World of Tomorrow.

2:30 PM: With more “real” work out of the way, I head back to the Conference Center to get a good seat for the end-of-day keynote with Bill Gates.
2:45 PM: I arrive in time to hear a high-level FBI official (speaking about cyber-crime and Internet security) crack a joke about hackers the U.S. has handed over to third-world countries being tortured. Nobody laughs.

3:00 PM: Jon DeVaan introduces Bill Gates. I’m not standing up this time. Bill gets right down to business, presenting his vision for the future of the company and the future of technology. He’s not the charismatic, boisterous speaker that Steve Ballmer is, but it’s hard not to be captivated by the vision of the man who basically invented the industry we all work in. Sure, there’s a part of me that wonders how I went from a Mac-using, Firefox-surfing, Blogspotting and Gmailing (Google products), Flickrite (now a Yahoo! product) to full assimilation in a month, but the energy and potential at Microsoft are contagious.

5:00 PM I’m finished at the Conference Center, and there’s no sense in waiting for a shuttle and doing half an hour of work, so I take the hard copies I’m editing with me and head home. I love my job. It’s a beautiful day.

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Windmill!

Ha! You were expecting a castle creation or something, weren’t you? (Via Brick Brick.)

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To the minimobile, Robin!

Sir Nelson has built a nifty mini batmobile:

Using one of the strange little racer bodies, Nelson has created a masterpiece! Instantly recognizable as the world famous super car, this mini version is awesome, way to go Nelson!

Take a gander at the gallery

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More Plastic Geeks!

A month or so I posted a batch of geeky minifigs. Today I’m back with more.

Richard Stallman (aka RMS), free software demigod:
Richard Stallman (aka RMS)

Larry Page and Sergey Brin, founders of Google:
Larry Page and Sergey Brin

Blaise Pascal, mathematician, physicist, philosopher, and inventor (1623-1662):
Blaise Pascal

Ada Lovelace, the founder of scientific computing (1815-1852):
Ada Lovelace

Steve Ballmer, my boss (well, a few people removed):
Steve Ballmer

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Robopants?!

Looking through Graznador’s photostream again today, I caught something I’d missed earlier. Graznador proves that those horrible Galidor action figures LEGO made a few years ago can be used for something. Specifically, rediculously awesome robopants:

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Graznador’s Figs and Bots

Flickr user Graznador (“Peter” to some) has posted several interesting minifigs in the last few days:

What first caught my eye, though, was this hilariously awesome “Basketbot”:

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The Brothers Brick is funded by our readers and the community. Articles may include affiliate links, and when you purchase products from those links, TBB may earn a commission that helps support the site.