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 Fun / Party / * (-5)
Subject: 
Question about Colour
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.color, lugnet.announce.moc, lugnet.fun.party, lugnet.space
Followup-To: 
lugnet.color
Date: 
Mon, 10 Apr 2006 03:27:42 GMT
Highlighted: 
! (details)
Viewed: 
17616 times
  
I thought as a matter of interest just what colour my wife’s latest MOC actually is ?

It was unvieled at the latest of our club meetings.

It was inspired by parts from the space set 7190 Millenium Falcon

Some say new grey, others; old grey. The centre certainly was new brown, but that is debateable.

I know first hand a fair bit of EC went into this MOC and unfortunately the pic does not realy do it justice. Those who saw it first hand know the true depth of it.

The fact of the matter is, if it was modled on the aforementioned space set, that in itself defines the colour of the MOC, however MOCs can very well be an individuals interperatation of the inspiring matter itself. A fine exmple of this is the recent Quad-mech competition of the broad variety of entries all built based solely on ones interperatation.

The question still stands, what colour has been most accuratley portrayed in the interperatation ?



Please LMKWYT


Subject: 
Re: 100,000 Views!!! I'm Throwing a Party on LUGNET
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.fun.party
Date: 
Thu, 2 Jun 2005 01:51:13 GMT
Viewed: 
7661 times
  
In lugnet.fun.party, Eric Sophie wrote:
In lugnet.fun.party, Tom Duggan wrote:
Wow...great party you have here...is that Kenny G I'm hearing?

No Kenny G. but I do take requests, what your hearing now is the Trans Siberian
Orchestra, and Zam Fir rocking the pan flute, next is Voivod.

Take requests?  How about VH's "Baluchitherium"?  Incredible MOCs go through my
head whenever I listen to that song.

I got to tell you...one of the greatest feelings I got from looking at your
folders was a real feeling of giddiness when I saw
Jamac.....Jamaqu....Jamig...hell ...CumQuat all broken into little peices....
I can't explain it...but it made me feel real good inside....anyone else?

You and me both brother, that thing is a royal pain my my ass.

e

As much as I feel sorry for Mr. J.'s ummm... "accident", it does feel good to
see a big creation as just a pile of parts.

Adr.


Subject: 
Re: 100,000 Views!!! I'm Throwing a Party on LUGNET
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.fun.party
Date: 
Wed, 1 Jun 2005 23:40:11 GMT
Viewed: 
6951 times
  
100,000+ Views on my Brickshelf Gallery!


Eric Sophie & the ZRX2

Thank you!!!


Biomechanical Bricks
Eric “Legomaster” Sophie


Subject: 
Re: 100,000 Views!!! I'm Throwing a Party on LUGNET
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.fun.party
Date: 
Wed, 1 Jun 2005 23:25:04 GMT
Viewed: 
7183 times
  
In lugnet.fun.party, Jason Rowoldt wrote:
Eric, there are a few people who's creations I dare not look at directly because
they are so complicated, so unfathomable, I fear I may go mad just contemplating
them.  You are at the top of the this list.

Gosh wow, I urge you to reconsider.
btw, welcome, tea, juice, water, beer or spirits?

Many things can be done with LEGO, which is the main reason I like it.  I love
that you can create a sculpture of a cartoon character (like Eric H.), or a
giant dinosaur (like Henry L.), or a giant battleship (like Adrian D.).
However, all of these things I feel I could build, given enough parts and time.
There are some fantastic innovations in all of these creations, but one looks at
them and understands what they are, and how they were built, more or less.  You
may wonder at the little details and the amount of parts involved, or how you
support something that weighs so much, but because they seem to be built with
basic bricks, you kind of understand how cool and amazing they are immediately.
You realize you PROBABLY couldn't really build it, but some small part of you
thinks "well, if I had a ton of parts and really devoted myself, I could do
that".

However, when I look at some of your robot/biomechanical sculptures, I want to
move on immediately.

LMAO, but :( [frown] instead.
awwwww.
Dave Eaton said the same.

It's akin to driving in your new car that you saved up for
and researched and finally bought, and a Ferrari Enzo rolls by and drops your
jaw.  Certainly it's pretty to look at and appreciate superficially, but you
dare not take a ride or really look closely, because that path leads to madness
and poverty.

All I started with was some blue bricks and a dream. The rest followed like
magic. Donations and sponsors saved the day, or the bot, whichever your prefer.

I rememeber walking by your blue robot (the big one ... J... :) at Brickfest I
think last year, and my girlfriend asked if it could walk.  Now, I had seen your
stuff on Brickshelf and maybe at other Brickfests, but I certainly knew it could
not walk around.  If someone had built a LEGO robot that could follow people
around the fest from room to room, certainly that person would be in a hot tub
with supermodels drinking champagne from Waterford crystal glasses, not kindly
and patiently trying to give simple answers to extremely complex questions.

If you program it, the robot will do as you command.
"kindly and patiently trying to give simple answers to extremely complex
questions" is all I can do so people can cope with the magnatude of the robot.
Your post is an example. People shy away when it takes effort to understand.
I simply want people to enjoy the possibilities the LEGO system offers.

When you stare directly at it and realize what it CAN do, however, how
complicated and lifelike and amazing it is, it disturbs you.

The realization has always been there, from the very first TECHNIC sets.
It's up to you and I to explore the possibilities. OR allow the artist to delve
in to this strange madness. You sit back and enjoy.

When you get home
and look up "Legomaster" on Brickshelf and realize that was only one of dozens
and dozens and dozens of complicated and awesome robots that this guy has built,
well, it's time to go cry into your collection and build a little truck, and
realize you will never be that talented.

LMAO, honest, I have felt like that when seeing some of the creations at Fan
Displays on Brickshelf as well as the various Cons and Fan Fests.
Let it inspire rather than quelch your own ideas.


So, hat off to you sir, for being one of the best in the world.

I hope to earn it, not compete or assume. I try, and I simply enjoy building.
Add to that some good fortune, good friends that encourage me, as well as my
desire to share with other people. There you have it. Either way, wow, thank
you.

Here is your drink. I have to flip the mix tape.

e


Subject: 
Re: 100,000 Views!!! I'm Throwing a Party on LUGNET
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.fun.party
Date: 
Wed, 1 Jun 2005 23:00:46 GMT
Viewed: 
7519 times
  
In lugnet.fun.party, Tom Duggan wrote:
Wow...great party you have here...is that Kenny G I'm hearing?

No Kenny G. but I do take requests, what your hearing now is the Trans Siberian
Orchestra, and Zam Fir rocking the pan flute, next is Voivod.

I got to tell you...one of the greatest feelings I got from looking at your
folders was a real feeling of giddiness when I saw
Jamac.....Jamaqu....Jamig...hell ...CumQuat all broken into little peices....
I can't explain it...but it made me feel real good inside....anyone else?

You and me both brother, that thing is a royal pain my my ass.

e



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