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 Organizations / United States / DelVaLUG / *44 (-10)
Subject: 
DelVaLUG to exhibit at Wizard World Philadelphia
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.events, lugnet.org.us.delvalug, lugnet.loc.us.de, lugnet.loc.us.nj, lugnet.loc.us.pa, lugnet.loc.us.pa.phi
Followup-To: 
lugnet.org.us.delvalug
Date: 
Thu, 31 May 2007 13:16:16 GMT
Viewed: 
19408 times
  
DelVaLUG, the Delaware Valley LEGO Users Group, will be exhibiting at the Wizard World Philadelphia pop-culture expo on 15-17 June, 2007. The event is held at the Pennsylvania Convention Center.

Featured elements of the display will be custom models tied to three of this summer’s action movies: “Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer,” “Spider-Man 3,” and “The Transformers.”

Behind the scenes: This is an event that DelVaLUG members first proposed before the 2006 show, but we finally approached Wizard Entertainment this April. You have to be diplomatic when cold-calling, and cite the right advantages; but they were very happy to have us. After all, the company isn’t just comic books -- it does publish the magazines ToyFare and ToyWishes, so a toy-based display that can adapt itself to the show’s themes is definitely appropriate.

We’ll be using this event for AFOL promotion and club recruitment; the product literature distributed at BrickFest will be used. Since I’m deeply involved with the Philcon SF convention, I’ll also be promoting that. It’s not a big segue; a matter of “Oh, and we’ll be appearing later this year at Philcon -- different theme, much more convivial, and you get to build with the parts.”


Subject: 
Re: LEGO events at Worldcon 2007
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.org.us.delvalug
Date: 
Tue, 19 Dec 2006 05:35:52 GMT
Viewed: 
5796 times
  
In lugnet.events, Phillip Thorne wrote:
   Since I’ve successfully run LEGO-based events at the Philcon SF/F convention for the past three years, I’ve been asked to investigate doing the same for the 65th World Science Fiction Convention -- Nippon2007, the first Worldcon to be held in Japan, in August of next year. But I need your suggestions and tips! Thanks for your help, everybody; and remember, this is still a feasibility study.

Who? First I’d have to locate American (etc.) AFOLs planning to attend.

I will be attending.

But, if you search my name here on Lugnet and look at my stuff, you’ll find it’s not science fictional.


   Japanese AFOLdom can contribute even if its members don’t attend -- they can mail-in MOCs (assuming I get some assistance with Japanese parcel post). But actually contacting Japanese builders is, we all know, difficult. (I can get recruitment announcements posted via the website and hardcopy progress reports.)

What events? An exhibit is easiest, with MOCs provided by Japanese and overseas attendees. An open build would be trickier to organize, because a parts supply would be needed -- and although I happily loan mine to Philcon, and the Worldcon will be shipping a bunch of stuff from the U.S., I’m not in a rush to send my own pieces halfway around the globe.

I agree, I don’t see how to get big things there.

  
What theme? It’s an SF convention, and it’s in Japan, so the most obvious models would be mecha -- replicas and original designs. But fans everywhere build everything, so there’s really no “distinctive local flavor” to that -- is there? Models inspired by the author and artist GoHs (guests of honor) would be topical -- that’ll require some research.

Dave Brin is a guest, as well.

  
(Obviously fantasy castles? “Final Fantasy”- and “Miyazaki”-esque flying contraptions? Gojira & Co.? Mindstorms robots?)

Where? Any suggestions as to where else I should make this announcement? Mecha Hub and Classic Space are the first that come to mind.

Followups to DelVaLUG since that’s my home club, and it’s low-traffic. Other discussion elsewhere as necessary.


Subject: 
Re: LEGO events at Worldcon 2007
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.org.us.delvalug
Date: 
Tue, 15 Aug 2006 21:30:06 GMT
Viewed: 
4581 times
  
Comments intermixed below

In lugnet.events, Phillip Thorne wrote:
   Since I’ve successfully run LEGO-based events at the Philcon SF/F convention for the past three years, I’ve been asked to investigate doing the same for the 65th World Science Fiction Convention -- Nippon2007, the first Worldcon to be held in Japan, in August of next year. But I need your suggestions and tips! Thanks for your help, everybody; and remember, this is still a feasibility study.

Who? First I’d have to locate American (etc.) AFOLs planning to attend. Japanese AFOLdom can contribute even if its members don’t attend -- they can mail-in MOCs (assuming I get some assistance with Japanese parcel post). But actually contacting Japanese builders is, we all know, difficult. (I can get recruitment announcements posted via the website and hardcopy progress reports.)


I might be interested in sending stuff(but I’m skittish about this sort of thing, any assurances I could get would be helpful). I’d certainly be interested if I could get some help to get over to Japan! Bryce, Soren, and myself have some experience contanting Japanese builders.

   What events? An exhibit is easiest, with MOCs provided by Japanese and overseas attendees. An open build would be trickier to organize, because a parts supply would be needed -- and although I happily loan mine to Philcon, and the Worldcon will be shipping a bunch of stuff from the U.S., I’m not in a rush to send my own pieces halfway around the globe.

Ahem, see what I was saying above?

  
What theme? It’s an SF convention, and it’s in Japan, so the most obvious models would be mecha -- replicas and original designs. But fans everywhere build everything, so there’s really no “distinctive local flavor” to that -- is there? Models inspired by the author and artist GoHs (guests of honor) would be topical -- that’ll require some research.

(Obviously fantasy castles? “Final Fantasy”- and “Miyazaki”-esque flying contraptions? Gojira & Co.? Mindstorms robots?)

Where? Any suggestions as to where else I should make this announcement? Mecha Hub and Classic Space are the first that come to mind.


Certainly posting to MechaHub’s forums would help you out and would be a good idea.

Mark Neumann
   Followups to DelVaLUG since that’s my home club, and it’s low-traffic. Other discussion elsewhere as necessary.


Subject: 
LEGO events at Worldcon 2007
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.events, lugnet.build.mecha, lugnet.space, lugnet.loc.jp, lugnet.org.us.delvalug
Followup-To: 
lugnet.org.us.delvalug
Date: 
Tue, 15 Aug 2006 18:38:32 GMT
Highlighted: 
(details)
Viewed: 
14938 times
  
Since I’ve successfully run LEGO-based events at the Philcon SF/F convention for the past three years, I’ve been asked to investigate doing the same for the 65th World Science Fiction Convention -- Nippon2007, the first Worldcon to be held in Japan, in August of next year. But I need your suggestions and tips! Thanks for your help, everybody; and remember, this is still a feasibility study.

Who? First I’d have to locate American (etc.) AFOLs planning to attend. Japanese AFOLdom can contribute even if its members don’t attend -- they can mail-in MOCs (assuming I get some assistance with Japanese parcel post). But actually contacting Japanese builders is, we all know, difficult. (I can get recruitment announcements posted via the website and hardcopy progress reports.)

What events? An exhibit is easiest, with MOCs provided by Japanese and overseas attendees. An open build would be trickier to organize, because a parts supply would be needed -- and although I happily loan mine to Philcon, and the Worldcon will be shipping a bunch of stuff from the U.S., I’m not in a rush to send my own pieces halfway around the globe.

What theme? It’s an SF convention, and it’s in Japan, so the most obvious models would be mecha -- replicas and original designs. But fans everywhere build everything, so there’s really no “distinctive local flavor” to that -- is there? Models inspired by the author and artist GoHs (guests of honor) would be topical -- that’ll require some research.

(Obviously fantasy castles? “Final Fantasy”- and “Miyazaki”-esque flying contraptions? Gojira & Co.? Mindstorms robots?)

Where? Any suggestions as to where else I should make this announcement? Mecha Hub and Classic Space are the first that come to mind.

Followups to DelVaLUG since that’s my home club, and it’s low-traffic. Other discussion elsewhere as necessary.


Subject: 
LEGO events at Philcon 2006
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.events, lugnet.build.mecha, lugnet.build.microscale, lugnet.castle, lugnet.space, lugnet.org.us.delvalug, lugnet.loc.us.de, lugnet.loc.us.md, lugnet.loc.us.nj, lugnet.loc.us.ny, lugnet.loc.us.pa
Followup-To: 
lugnet.org.us.delvalug
Date: 
Sat, 29 Jul 2006 20:50:04 GMT
Viewed: 
30117 times
  
Philcon 2006, the 70th edition of the annual Philadelphia Area Conference of Science Fiction and Fantasy, will run this coming November; and for the third year, I’ll be conducting a set of LEGO-themed events. Here are some pics of the 2004 event and 2005.

There will definitely be an Open Build and a MOC display with pre- and at-con-built SF-themed models, and maybe a Space-themed train layout. I might run a couple of QuikWars games, or arrange a screening of SF/F-topic brikfilms. There may be slideshows and building technique workshops.

How can you help?
  • Do you want to come and present on a topic such as Bionicle, Castles, Mecha, Micro, Moonbase or Space?
  • Want to contribute images and anecdots for such a slideshow, run by someone else?
  • Itching to run a game of BrickQuest, BrikWars, or QuikWars?
  • Got a fancy new Mindstorms NXT bot to demo?
  • Have a MOC you can send by mail?
  • Have MOC plans you can send by e-mail, that I’ll recreate locally and display under your name?
  • Got a brikfilm you’d like to screen?
Why should you help?
  • To show off your building prowess to an audience outside AFOLdom: over a thousand people from DE, MD, NJ, NY, PA, and VA.
  • To expand the awareness of advanced LEGO building, and AFOLdom.
  • Because you need another collaborative LEGO fix two-and-a-half months after BrickFest.
If you’re interested, please contact me at kids2006@philcon.org for details and planning. Thank you. (Philcon is a copyright of the Philadelphia Science Fiction Society. Philcon 2006 runs the weekend of 17-19 November 2006 at the Sheraton Center City, located near City Hall. LEGO activities at Philcon are considered a sub-track of the Children’s Program only for organizational purposes. This message has been cross-posted because... well, there are lots of reasons you might logically be interested.)


Subject: 
Re: Merry Christmas 2005 pics finally posted:)
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.trains, lugnet.town, lugnet.org.us.delvalug
Date: 
Mon, 16 Jan 2006 16:02:05 GMT
Viewed: 
8281 times
  
Wonderful!

The skating pond is so simple yet so effective. All the details throughout the
scene are wonderful.

Did you drill holes in the 1x1 transperent rounds to make the Xmas light
strings?

I didn't get a chance to do one this year but you have given me some wonderful
ideas for next year!

Thanks!


Subject: 
Merry Christmas 2005 pics finally posted:)
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.trains, lugnet.town, lugnet.org.us.delvalug
Date: 
Sat, 14 Jan 2006 14:56:47 GMT
Viewed: 
6625 times
  
Happy belated holidays all!
    Just wanted to share some pics of my holiday diarama and spread the cheer
with my favorite bricks:) hope you enjoy!

     come see them at: http://www.brickshelf.com/cgi-bin/gallery.cgi?f=162367

Happy holidays and happy building, chris:)


Subject: 
DelVaLUG at Philcon 2005
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.events, lugnet.org.us.delvalug, lugnet.loc.us.pa.phi
Followup-To: 
lugnet.org.us.delvalug
Date: 
Tue, 27 Dec 2005 01:50:57 GMT
Viewed: 
10291 times
  
PHILCON is a three-day science fiction convention held annually since 1935 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. As an AFOL and operator of the con’s Children’s Program (since 2003), I initiated a LEGO sub-track in 2004. (Report to LUGNET.) This year it had a slightly different location and a much greater turnout.

Although GardenSLUGger Eric Sophie was unable to return this year (his giant robots are always crowd-pleasers), I instead had the assistance of fellow DelVaLUG member Joe Cook. (The rest of DelVaLUG was exhibiting at a train show the same weekend.)

Being an SF con, the sensible model themes were Space, Space Replica, and Mecha. Since I had to carry everything to the hotel (models, bulk brick, other Kids Prog supplies) the sensible scale was Micro. (Castle would also be compatible, but it’s not one of my own themes.)

In addition to 20 of my own models, and 3 from Joe, I had 14 “virtual” contributions from 3 well-known SF micro-builders -- that is, I recreated their posted designs with my own brick supply, and identified the originators with MOC cards. (To wit: Jason Allemann, Brian Cooper, and Chris Deck of Germany. My plan to build a copy of Chris Doyle’s “Snack Sized Serenity” fell through.)

Over the weekend, some 20 attendees (both youngster and adult) built 28 models (more if you count individual customized minifigs), some of them drawing upon leftover fragments of my own models. There’s more exuberance than skill in many, but that very separation from AFOLdom resulted in some very interesting parts use.

Photos of the display, at-con MOCs, and happy builders are in this Brickshelf gallery. It also includes a spreadsheet (MS Excel and CSV versions) detailing the models.

The Display and Build were located in the front of the large room dedicated to Gaming, just off of and visible from the con’s Registration and Info area, resulting in lots of foot traffic. They ran all-day Saturday and Sunday. On Saturday it was adjacent to a contingent from the FIRST Robotics League. To prevent the display of micro-ships from resembling a tabletop parking lot, I built a “docking spire” of Znap pieces to elevate them.

Activities:
  • Display
  • Open Build
  • “LEGO Gaming 101”
  • “BrickQuest”-derived “Harry Potter”-themed game
  • “LEGO Builder X-Treme” board game
Activities that did not happen:
  • Micro Moonbase Themed Build fell through (I didn’t get to build any explanatory samples)
  • Impressive MOCs slide shows (returning item)
  • Stop-motion film fest (returning item)
  • Large-scale space combat sim (the con’s semi-theme was Mil-SF, thanks to Author GoH David Weber and Artist GoH David Mattingly, his cover artist)


Subject: 
Re: SF LEGO at Philcon 2005: call for participants
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.org.us.delvalug, lugnet.events
Date: 
Fri, 9 Dec 2005 23:33:53 GMT
Viewed: 
5795 times
  
In lugnet.build.mecha, Phillip Thorne wrote:
LEGO programming will be returning to the 2005 <http://www.philcon.org
Philcon> SF convention!  This will be the second year with an official
exhibit and events.

-snip-

Good luck this weekend Phil!

I am unable to attend. Please let us know how things went.
Highlights, thoughts and how the Lego events go.

Thank you!

Eric Sophie


Subject: 
DelVaLUG at NBC10 Consumer Expo 11/12-13
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.org.us.delvalug, lugnet.events
Followup-To: 
lugnet.org.us.delvalug
Date: 
Tue, 15 Nov 2005 18:20:57 GMT
Viewed: 
6174 times
  
What: The NBC10 Consumer Expo was the latest incarnation of an annual event conducted by Philadelphia TV station WCAU. DelVaLUG’s first public event was at last year’s Halloween-weekend Tech & Lifestyles Expo (Brickshelf photos) (and we still don’t know how the organizers learned of our existence). This year the hall was shared by America’s Videogame Expo. (If we’d known that beforehand, we might’ve built some themed arcade game MOCs.)

Where: The Ft.Washington Expo Center is located just off the Pennsylvania Turnpike (Route 276), to the northwest of Philadelphia. It also hosted the Greenberg train show (Brickshelf photos) at which DelVaLUG exhibited this past February.

DelVaLUG’s parcel was located in the Lifestyles & Entertainment portion of the show, the rear-left quadrant, near the Future City Competition, the Amateur Radio Relay League, and various vacation providers. It was also proximate to the “Videotopia” section of vgXpo, filled with three dozen 1980s arcade games (relatively quiet) and various dance- and guitar-simulators of more recent vintage (indisputably loud). (By “loud” I mean “84 decibels” -- I measured it. That’s not only “strain your voice to be heard,” that’s “hearing damage with prolonged exposure” territory. Ouch.) The FIRST Robotics kids, with tabletop and lawnmower-sized R/C robots, were on the other side. (The FIRST LEGO League, as seen at BrickFest, is the 101 level of FIRST.)

When: Saturday 11/12 and Sunday 11/13, 10:00-17:00, plus setup on Friday afternoon and each morning, and breakdown Sunday afternoon. Breakdown proceeded very quickly -- starting at 16:45 all the MOCs were packed away within 30 minutes (into Ziploc bags, cardboard boxes, purpose-built wooden trays), and Tim’s ILTCO-standard tables were dismantled and toted away by 18:00.

This isn’t like BrickFest -- seven hours of standing, answering questions, and standing poised to answer questions is tough on the feet. Fortunately, this year our parcel came with two chairs instead of one. (We didn’t need to bring out the two I’d brought in anticipation.) (OTOH, it’s not like the LEGO Road Show, either -- it’s air-conditioned.)

Who: Saturday was crewed by Jim F., Phil T., and new DelVaLUG member Roy F. Sunday added Tim C. and Jeff S., plus (for several midday hours) two members of PennLUG.

The usual assortment of hundreds of attendees tramped past the display: casual glancers, wide-eyed youngsters, “LEGO makes trains?” incredulites, and a small number of YFOLs and dark-age potential AFOLs. We handed out a great many informational mini-flyers, plus various Shop At Home back issues (“Where do I buy trains?”) and catalog-request cards; also (to likely prospects) cards promoting the LEGO program at Philcon this December (one of two DelVaLUG events that weekend).

The vgXpo attracted a dozen college-age cosplayers (Saturday only, for some reason), and some vendors had booth bunnies. Few of them managed to drop by.

MOCs: Ten ILTCO-standard table-modules, featuring: two train loops, Tim C.‘s giant sandy mountain with tunnel, Jeff S.‘s train station, and more -- I’ll address this in detail in a follow-up post. A first batch of 25 photos is now on Brickshelf. (I apologize for those that are dim or blurry -- the hall’s lighting was much worse than it seemed.)



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