To LUGNET HomepageTo LUGNET News HomepageTo LUGNET Guide Homepage
 Help on Searching
 
Post new message to lugnet.build.ancientOpen lugnet.build.ancient in your NNTP NewsreaderTo LUGNET News Traffic PageSign In (Members)
 Building / Ancient / 696
695  |  697
Subject: 
Re: The Brick Testament begins the book of Judges
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.build.ancient
Date: 
Sat, 26 Feb 2005 02:23:43 GMT
Viewed: 
5264 times
  
In lugnet.build.ancient, Bruce Hietbrink wrote:
   Hey Brendan,

Hey, Bruce!

   Great to see the new installment:

Thanks, good to be back in the swing of things.

   Bezek: In 1:1, I like how you are making the different tribes by changing the arm colors. Simple but effective.

The Israelites got a little bit of a makeover for Judges, with the arm colors distinguishing the twelve tribes and uniform tan pants instead of the old brown and sometimes tan-with-brown-cod-piece. Having conquered so many cities and towns by now, I figured they could afford to dress up a little--and finally afford some helmets and shields for the soldiers.

   In 1:4, I’m not really a fan of the helmet idea (though I completely understand the problem of coming up with different looks for different factions). And all those poor katana! :(

I had been looking at different portrayls of ancient Israelite weaponry on the web and in a few books, ones based on ancient archeology. While it still can’t be known exactly what types of weapons were being used by the ancient Israelites and their adversaries (except where specified in the bible), the general concensus is that the shields of the time were small and round, and the swords were short. Spears were also used (and I’ve shown plenty of that so far) as well as slings and bows and arrows (which I will likely show more of later).

I hesitated a while before going ahead with the decision to make short swords out of the long-bladed katanas, but I’m happy with how they tuned out. And I really like the look of the backward gray aviator caps as ancient helmets, especially combined with the short swords and small shields of matching gray.

   It’s a good idea, I just have so few that I hate to see any get chopped up.

Yeah, they’re not super-cheap on Bricklink, so it was sort of a tough decision to take the hobby knife to them. But I think I’ll get much more use out of them in their shortened state.

   Now, if you want to chop up those huge scimitars from the Orient Expedition/Pirate 4+ sets, be my guest.

Heh. The katanas were a very easy mod. I don’t know if I’m skilled enough to make something decent-looking out of the oversized scimitars. I keep almost wanting to use those for one of the many factions in the greater Canaan area, but every time I try putting them into the hands of minifig soldiers, they really just look comically too large. Still, I’m sure I’ll press them into service sooner or later.

   You’re really hopping on the customizing wagon in this chapter, aren’t you? And in 1:6. You can no longer say “no minifigs were harmed in the building of this chapter”.

Owch, yeah.

   Jerusalem: I always love microscale towns. Also in 1:8 the woman in the tile-pool is my favorite detail.

:) This is the first shot where I thought to have the Israelites attacking from multiple angles--otherwise it looks as though the fleeing people might actually escape.

   Four massacres: Cute title. More good microscalery.

I actually had to recreate microscale Debir for this shot. The Israelites had already attacked it under Joshua’s command and killed everyone who lived there. I guess they lost control of it in the meantime? And had to go back and kill everyone again and burn it to the ground?

   I actually rather dislike Calebs custom hair.

Yeah, it’s a little weird, but Caleb had Harry Potter-style black hair when he was younger, and didn’t look right at all to give him the standard smooth gray hairpiece.

   Argh! More katana chopping. My favorite thing in this chapter, though, is the use of the flat-top hair to make sort of Russian-looking headgear. Very cool. I’ve seen tires used effectively to do something similar (I forget by who. It was in an ISCC entry a couple of years ago--some adventurers story that included a temple with a giant statue.)

Ah yes, Gary Thomas’s excellent Temple of Catur Muka.

This is actually our first look at the Philistines! And again, I was inspired by the way the Philistines have been depicted by others--it all seems to be based on an ancient Egyptian wall carving depicting their battles against the so-called Sea Peoples (a group which included the Philistines, so it is generally believed). The soldiers of the Sea People are shown with short swords, small shields, and most distictively, big (perhaps feather?) headdress. So the flattop hairpiece was my own take on that look.

Thanks for the comments.

-Brendan



Message is in Reply To:
  Re: The Brick Testament begins the book of Judges
 
Hey Brendan, Great to see the new installment: Bezek: In 1:1, I like how you are making the different tribes by changing the arm colors. Simple but effective. In 1:4, I'm not really a fan of the helmet idea (though I completely understand the (...) (20 years ago, 24-Feb-05, to lugnet.build.ancient, FTX)

6 Messages in This Thread:



Entire Thread on One Page:
Nested:  All | Brief | Compact | Dots
Linear:  All | Brief | Compact
    

Custom Search

©2005 LUGNET. All rights reserved. - hosted by steinbruch.info GbR