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So there I was, after a long day of work and a couple hours of housework,
when I decided I should settle into a few good hours of building. I've had
this idea for a spaceship for a while (the first of those for a new faction,
so I was excited to explore a radical (for me) design). So I settled into
building.
...As some of you might have caught, I spent a few months earlier in the
year organizing my pieces into about ten computer paper boxes, mostly by
color for basic elements, and a few boxes for speciallized elements. And
for really small items I had used some cardboard trays that originated in
some TLC packaging of long ago. The process of sorting was among the most
tedious I've endured in relation to this hobby, and it was with great
reservation that I decided to even do it (after over twenty years of never
sorting). But once it was done, I reaped immediate benefit. My castle
projects during the spring and summer were completed in a fraction of the
time I had estimated. My first attempt at a Moonbase went together in just
two or three days. And best of all, I new I would never have to sort
anything other than new sets again...
So there I am, building away, with the various boxes opened and positioned
around my living room coffee table. The ship was taking shape nicely. But
my tray of 1x1 plates had been out of reach, so I had moved it to balance on
the corner of a box filled with gray blocks. Then I twisted to reach into
the box of blue blocks. Suddenly I heard a crash, and I didn't need to turn
around to know I had bumped the precariously perched tray of 1x1 plates. I
stood up to survey the damage and saw the 1x1 plates (mostly the shades of
gray that come from Mosaics) strewn in throughout the box of gray blocks.
(Ah, you say, at least everything landed in a box.) But then, in my dismay,
I stepped backward, only to discover my heel in sudden contact with the
corner of yet another box! Unable to stop the momentum, all I could do was
wince as the catapult-like movement of the box underfoot sent *all* of my
black bricks scattering across my living room, some mixing into other boxes,
some falling on the rug, and others bouncing under the furniture.
The sorting! The finding! The resorting! The hoping to high heaven the
cat doesn't find the pieces that I surely missed! Ah the tragedy!
And so it is that I find myself writing "Noooooo!!" on Lugnet at 3:00am...
Sigh. The things I do for my spaceships... :)
-Hendo
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Thats pretty brutal man! Just be glad none went under the vent though.
I have to worry about that every time I work in my room.
(BTW, I'm also working on something for starship)
More than once God has spared me pain by causing pieces
to bounce precariously on the little bars and land on the nearby carpet.
Still though, thats brutal.
Hasta La Vista, Sean
In lugnet.general, John P. Henderson writes:
> So there I was, after a long day of work and a couple hours of housework,
> when I decided I should settle into a few good hours of building. I've had
> this idea for a spaceship for a while (the first of those for a new faction,
> so I was excited to explore a radical (for me) design). So I settled into
> building.
>
> ...As some of you might have caught, I spent a few months earlier in the
> year organizing my pieces into about ten computer paper boxes, mostly by
> color for basic elements, and a few boxes for speciallized elements. And
> for really small items I had used some cardboard trays that originated in
> some TLC packaging of long ago. The process of sorting was among the most
> tedious I've endured in relation to this hobby, and it was with great
> reservation that I decided to even do it (after over twenty years of never
> sorting). But once it was done, I reaped immediate benefit. My castle
> projects during the spring and summer were completed in a fraction of the
> time I had estimated. My first attempt at a Moonbase went together in just
> two or three days. And best of all, I new I would never have to sort
> anything other than new sets again...
>
> So there I am, building away, with the various boxes opened and positioned
> around my living room coffee table. The ship was taking shape nicely. But
> my tray of 1x1 plates had been out of reach, so I had moved it to balance on
> the corner of a box filled with gray blocks. Then I twisted to reach into
> the box of blue blocks. Suddenly I heard a crash, and I didn't need to turn
> around to know I had bumped the precariously perched tray of 1x1 plates. I
> stood up to survey the damage and saw the 1x1 plates (mostly the shades of
> gray that come from Mosaics) strewn in throughout the box of gray blocks.
> (Ah, you say, at least everything landed in a box.) But then, in my dismay,
> I stepped backward, only to discover my heel in sudden contact with the
> corner of yet another box! Unable to stop the momentum, all I could do was
> wince as the catapult-like movement of the box underfoot sent *all* of my
> black bricks scattering across my living room, some mixing into other boxes,
> some falling on the rug, and others bouncing under the furniture.
>
> The sorting! The finding! The resorting! The hoping to high heaven the
> cat doesn't find the pieces that I surely missed! Ah the tragedy!
>
> And so it is that I find myself writing "Noooooo!!" on Lugnet at 3:00am...
>
> Sigh. The things I do for my spaceships... :)
>
> -Hendo
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I feel your pain!
In lugnet.general, John P. Henderson writes:
> snippage
> The sorting! The finding! The resorting! The hoping to high heaven the
> cat doesn't find the pieces that I surely missed! Ah the tragedy!
Usually, for me, it's the blasted cat(s) that initiates the disaster in the
first place!
James Wilson
Dallas, TX
Lugnet #1783
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Thats really horrid. :-(
I just sorted all my small technic parts. I *hate* sorting small parts.
I've also done the "step on the edge of a tub and send the bricks flying"
thing.
Not fun.
I feel for you.
-Jon
--
| The Shipyard - http://zemi.net/shipyard
| The Moonbase Project - http://www.classic-space.com/moonbase/start/
| My Lego Creations - http://zemi.net/lego
| Attack of the Bricks - http://www.bricklink.com/store.asp?p=jpalmer
"Hendo (John P. Henderson)" <hendo@valyance.com> wrote in message
news:H53FM7.4yJ@lugnet.com...
> So there I was, after a long day of work and a couple hours of housework,
> when I decided I should settle into a few good hours of building. I've had
> this idea for a spaceship for a while (the first of those for a new faction,
> so I was excited to explore a radical (for me) design). So I settled into
> building.
>
> ...As some of you might have caught, I spent a few months earlier in the
> year organizing my pieces into about ten computer paper boxes, mostly by
> color for basic elements, and a few boxes for speciallized elements. And
> for really small items I had used some cardboard trays that originated in
> some TLC packaging of long ago. The process of sorting was among the most
> tedious I've endured in relation to this hobby, and it was with great
> reservation that I decided to even do it (after over twenty years of never
> sorting). But once it was done, I reaped immediate benefit. My castle
> projects during the spring and summer were completed in a fraction of the
> time I had estimated. My first attempt at a Moonbase went together in just
> two or three days. And best of all, I new I would never have to sort
> anything other than new sets again...
>
> So there I am, building away, with the various boxes opened and positioned
> around my living room coffee table. The ship was taking shape nicely. But
> my tray of 1x1 plates had been out of reach, so I had moved it to balance on
> the corner of a box filled with gray blocks. Then I twisted to reach into
> the box of blue blocks. Suddenly I heard a crash, and I didn't need to turn
> around to know I had bumped the precariously perched tray of 1x1 plates. I
> stood up to survey the damage and saw the 1x1 plates (mostly the shades of
> gray that come from Mosaics) strewn in throughout the box of gray blocks.
> (Ah, you say, at least everything landed in a box.) But then, in my dismay,
> I stepped backward, only to discover my heel in sudden contact with the
> corner of yet another box! Unable to stop the momentum, all I could do was
> wince as the catapult-like movement of the box underfoot sent *all* of my
> black bricks scattering across my living room, some mixing into other boxes,
> some falling on the rug, and others bouncing under the furniture.
>
> The sorting! The finding! The resorting! The hoping to high heaven the
> cat doesn't find the pieces that I surely missed! Ah the tragedy!
>
> And so it is that I find myself writing "Noooooo!!" on Lugnet at 3:00am...
>
> Sigh. The things I do for my spaceships... :)
>
> -Hendo
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you know, I did the exact same thing with my technic pieces the other day-
I sort my <small> technic pieces in spice boxes- you know, the sort that
have 6 compartments, 1 lid, and can stack?
Not a nice feeling, finishing sorting, and then having to do it all again
because some clumsy dolt (i.e., me!) has stepped on the box of 1 wide
bushings and sent them flying e!! itv gets a bite annoying, lookringy unwder
furhniture and in oteher boxres for tiney little technic pieces.
I really feel for you.
BTW, ca!n you find the word "everywhere"? I seem to have lost it in my bad
treading.
-Matthew
In lugnet.general, Jon Palmer writes:
> Thats really horrid. :-(
> I just sorted all my small technic parts. I *hate* sorting small parts.
> I've also done the "step on the edge of a tub and send the bricks flying"
> thing.
>
> Not fun.
> I feel for you.
>
> -Jon
> --
> | The Shipyard - http://zemi.net/shipyard
> | The Moonbase Project - http://www.classic-space.com/moonbase/start/
> | My Lego Creations - http://zemi.net/lego
> | Attack of the Bricks - http://www.bricklink.com/store.asp?p=jpalmer
>
> "Hendo (John P. Henderson)" <hendo@valyance.com> wrote in message
> news:H53FM7.4yJ@lugnet.com...
> > So there I was, after a long day of work and a couple hours of housework,
> > when I decided I should settle into a few good hours of building. I've had
> > this idea for a spaceship for a while (the first of those for a new faction,
> > so I was excited to explore a radical (for me) design). So I settled into
> > building.
> >
> > ...As some of you might have caught, I spent a few months earlier in the
> > year organizing my pieces into about ten computer paper boxes, mostly by
> > color for basic elements, and a few boxes for speciallized elements. And
> > for really small items I had used some cardboard trays that originated in
> > some TLC packaging of long ago. The process of sorting was among the most
> > tedious I've endured in relation to this hobby, and it was with great
> > reservation that I decided to even do it (after over twenty years of never
> > sorting). But once it was done, I reaped immediate benefit. My castle
> > projects during the spring and summer were completed in a fraction of the
> > time I had estimated. My first attempt at a Moonbase went together in just
> > two or three days. And best of all, I new I would never have to sort
> > anything other than new sets again...
> >
> > So there I am, building away, with the various boxes opened and positioned
> > around my living room coffee table. The ship was taking shape nicely. But
> > my tray of 1x1 plates had been out of reach, so I had moved it to balance on
> > the corner of a box filled with gray blocks. Then I twisted to reach into
> > the box of blue blocks. Suddenly I heard a crash, and I didn't need to turn
> > around to know I had bumped the precariously perched tray of 1x1 plates. I
> > stood up to survey the damage and saw the 1x1 plates (mostly the shades of
> > gray that come from Mosaics) strewn in throughout the box of gray blocks.
> > (Ah, you say, at least everything landed in a box.) But then, in my dismay,
> > I stepped backward, only to discover my heel in sudden contact with the
> > corner of yet another box! Unable to stop the momentum, all I could do was
> > wince as the catapult-like movement of the box underfoot sent *all* of my
> > black bricks scattering across my living room, some mixing into other boxes,
> > some falling on the rug, and others bouncing under the furniture.
> >
> > The sorting! The finding! The resorting! The hoping to high heaven the
> > cat doesn't find the pieces that I surely missed! Ah the tragedy!
> >
> > And so it is that I find myself writing "Noooooo!!" on Lugnet at 3:00am...
> >
> > Sigh. The things I do for my spaceships... :)
> >
> > -Hendo
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