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Subject: 
Re: The Brick Testament - The final Acts
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.build.ancient
Date: 
Sat, 7 Jul 2007 01:33:32 GMT
Viewed: 
17247 times
  
Hi, Bruce.

In lugnet.build.ancient, Bruce Hietbrink wrote:
   Oops, your most recent installment (David and Saul) made me remember that I’d never commented on the Final Acts.

Hey, I thought I’d finally slipped one right past you! :)

Always nice to have your comments.

   Paul in Athens - In the first pic I really like the microscale Accropolis, and I featured it on MicroBricks.

It’s an honor. Nice post, by the way. And thanks for bringing to my attention that microscale Manhattan. Very ambitious.

   In the second pic, the floor is really nice. It’s not really complex like your headlight brick mosaics, but the pattern is very pleasing.

Thanks, I’d just gotten a bunch of lt. gray 1x1 tiles in some discounted parts packs at a LEGO store and was itching to use them.

   In 17:19-21 I like the SNOTty floor, but the transition to the studs-up plates seems abrupt.

I hear that. It’s an odd setting. I tried to get a sense of what the Aeropagus looked like, and it seemed like it was an outdoor meeting area up on a rocky hill. I assumed the Greeks would have decorated it, so you get the contrast of polished “inlaid marble” floor and straight-up rocks. But it could have been more smoothly executed in LEGO.

   BTW, nice statues throughout. Is that white woman’s hair sculpy?

I assume it’s ABS, though I’m not positive. The part has the LEGO logo printed inside (like other LEGO hairpieces). Must be some type of prototype that never made it to market. But as long as it’s officially LEGO in some respect, I guess I feel OK using it.

   A close shave - I really like the menorah design and also the use of the grill plate in the wall of the synagogue.

Thanks, I thought the use of the grill plate was sort of “experimental”. I really like having it as a latticed window, but incorporating it into the scene was tricky.

   When Paul strips off his close, it would be more effective if you had an actual fleshy torso (Patrick from the Spongebob sets).

Good call. Though it might have confused people why Paul has chest acne. Are those dots on the back, too? I don’t have that fig yet. :(

   Speaking in tongues - Not much to comment on here. I’m not sure why tongues necessitates rolling on the ground, though.

Well, the text says that they were not just speaking in tongues, but also “prophesying”. When I’ve come across that term in the Bible before, it usually seems to imply the person being in some sort of prophetic frenzy state (much like in the “Everybody in a Frenzy” story in the latest BT update).

   Book burning - In the first pic, that’s an interesting bed design. Is that based around a window frame?

Yep. Wanted to try out a simple bed design for the sick guy in that photo, and liked the idea of the window hinges as little legs for the bed.

   In the same pic, I like that pattern in the back wall.

Thanks. Just a little something to keep it interesting. I was working on that wall design when I got whisked off to Europe for the art show in Slovakia. Had to finish it when I returned a month later.

   Nice action shots for 19:16, very WWF (oops, WWE I suppose).

I admit, I have been watching a lot of WWE wrestling this past year -- as will become apparent from a little LEGO side project I’m finishing up right now. :)

   In the book burning scene, the use of gray hair as rocks is cool. How appropriate that all of the books of magic being burned came from the Harry Potter theme. :)

Heh, yeah, I didn’t think of that. Is that really the only LEGO line that has used the books?

   Bored to Death - Nice attention to detail having Paul’s hair start growing back in. I also really like the scenery outside the windows (and changing from day to night). In the scene where Eutychus falls, the legs going out the window look great. When he is “picked up dead”, the broken neck design is very effective. I think I probably complained about this when you did this story the first time, but I think you do the story a disservice by cutting off verse 12, where Eutychus is fine. I know you have verse 10, but your rendering makes it seem that he’s not quite dead yet, but probably headed that way, rather than having had a miracle occur. I know you have to make judgements about where to end stories, and that the breaks and headers in most modern Bibles are not inspired, but an honest reading of the text says that this incident goes through verse 12, since verse 13 picks up with a change of scene.

Actually, last time I illustrated this story, I ended with “He was picked up dead” and didn’t have Paul come down at all. And yes, you called me on that at the time, as did some others. So now in the new version, Paul goes down, does whatever-he-does when he lies on top of the young man, and then goes back upstairs to keep talking until dawn. You’re right that I am still leaving off a couple things from the story: that Paul leaves when he’s done talking, and that people bring the young man home. Both seemed kind of incidental and not essential to illustrate.

-Brendan



Message is in Reply To:
  Re: The Brick Testament - The final Acts
 
Hey Brendan, Oops, your most recent installment (David and Saul) made me remember that I'd never commented on the Final Acts. Paul in Athens - In the first pic I really like the microscale Accropolis, and I featured it on (URL) MicroBricks>. In the (...) (17 years ago, 6-Jul-07, to lugnet.build.ancient, FTX)

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