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Weve had a Christmas mosaic competition in Byggepladen (the Danish LUG). My
contribution to the competition is this portrait of my daughter Lea:
Play well,
Jacob
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Hi Joe,
Simple suggestion: I wouldnt mix old grays with new grays (bluish gray or
stone gray). Heres also a link to a color
guide. I mostly use the RGB-values from LDraw (but I can change these values in
my program). 48x48 pixels isnt much, so dont expect miracles... Those images
look great.
Play well,
Maarten
Check my webpage (or at least the part about
mosaics)
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Do these seem like good representations? Can they be improved somehow? They
look a little rough to me, but I dont know, maybe thats as good as it gets
with 48x48 pixels and only five shades of gray. Any advice?
Thanks,
- Joe
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Its really difficult to answer this question because you only left a tiny
thumbnail, do you have a link to a larger file?
Janey Red Brick
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Im trying to help my boys make mosaic portraits of themselves as a present for
my wife. Having never done this before, Im not sure Im getting the optimal
result, and would appreciate advice from more experienced builders.
Each portrait will use a large (48x48) baseplate, and be grayscale. To
represent the grayscale in LEGO, Im using this palette:
&c181818 // Black
&c464A4D // Dark Bluish Gray
&c8A8A8A // Light Gray
&cE2E2E2 // Very Light Gray
&cFEFFFE // White
Those are the Bricklink colors, with RGB values cribbed with a screen capture
tool. So, first question: is this the best palette to use for a grayscale
mosaic? Are there any other colors I should consider?
Next, the mosaic patterns themselves. (I made these by starting with a photo,
and then fitting each pixel to the nearest color in the palette above.) Heres
the younger one:
And heres the older one:
Do these seem like good representations? Can they be improved somehow? They
look a little rough to me, but I dont know, maybe thats as good as it gets
with 48x48 pixels and only five shades of gray. Any advice?
Thanks,
- Joe
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Hi all,
A few months ago I finished a new giant mosaic. Size: 2,48W x 1,74H.
(pic is link)
If you want building instructions for your own mosaic, check out my
updated site.
Greetings,
Maarten
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In lugnet.build.mosaic, John Cooper wrote:
> I am interested in developing some LEGO mosaics using PhotoShop. Has anyone
> developed a file with the LEGO brick color RGB values loaded into PhotoShop? It
> would save lots of time if a color pallete has already been created.
>
> Thank you.
>
> John
Try this-
http://www.isodomos.com/ColorTree/LegoList
It's a little dated (2008) but a start.
Adrian
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I am interested in developing some LEGO mosaics using PhotoShop. Has anyone
developed a file with the LEGO brick color RGB values loaded into PhotoShop? It
would save lots of time if a color pallete has already been created.
Thank you.
John
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Great work! Good subject to use such a combination of techniques. Bravo!
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In lugnet.build.mosaic, Arthur Gugick wrote:
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Ive taken a short break from building Lego landmarks and have spent some
time building mosaics. Ive used a variety of techniques. Please take a look
and enjoy.
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Great subject, looks really nice, although it seems dark, giving a whole other
meaning behind this famous photo. I did a Google search for this pic and was
shocked to find that you arent the first to depict this woman in LEGO:
Thanks for sharing!
JOHN
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Although her name was not known at the time, her picture, titled Afghan Girl,
appeared on the June 1985 cover of National Geographic. The image itself was
named the most recognized photograph in the history of the magazine. Her
photograph was taken by National Geographic photographer Steve McCurry. McCurry,
rarely given the opportunity to photograph Afghan women, seized the opportunity
and captured her image. The image of her face, with a red scarf draped loosely
over her head and with her piercing sea-green eyes staring directly into the
camera, became a symbol both of the 1980s Afghan conflict and of the refugee
situation worldwide. (Wikipedia)
To make this mosaic I expanded a ten-color palette (black, grey, green, yellow,
white, tan, red, blue, dark blue, dark red) by covering each with one of four
transparent plates (clear, red, green, yellow) to generate a 28-color palette.
(Mathematically I should have had 4x10 = 40 distinct colors
but some were too
close to identify as potentially different shades.) Afghan Girl is my second
mosaic using this expanded palette technique.
Ive taken a short break from building Lego landmarks and have spent some time
building mosaics. Ive used a variety of techniques. Please take a look and
enjoy.
Flickr http://www.flickr.com/photos/10321180@N08/sets/72157621257153211/
Mocpages http://www.mocpages.com/folder.php/58677
Brickshelf http://www.brickshelf.com/cgi-bin/gallery.cgi?f=240087
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