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Probably...although I believe their eggs are generally of a rectangular
fiberous form, with small flexible polymer sacs inside where the pieces
begin their life.
Benjamin Whytcross
BWhytcro@PacificAccess.com.au
Ph: (03) 9856 5282
Directory Technology Pty Ltd
1/436 Elgar Road,
Box Hill, 3128
Growing older is compulsary..Growing up isn't :-)
-----Original Message-----
From: Christopher Lindsey [mailto:lindsey@nospam.mallorn.com]
Sent: Wednesday, April 19, 2000 4:30 PM
To: lugnet.fun.holiday@lugnet.com; lugnet.general@lugnet.com
Subject: Re: LEGO Easter Egg builder goes nuts!
John Gramley wrote:
> The reason is that I just spent way too much time building a way-too-large
> easter egg. It's 32 bricks long and wide and 36 bricks high. The pictures
> are at http://www.brickshelf.com/cgi-bin/gallery.cgi?f=381. They aren't the
> best pics, but they still show how big it is.
That's awesome! I really like it. You did a good job with the shape,
too;
getting a true egg form is difficult.
So is that where Lego bricks come from? They're hatched? :)
Chris
--
Remove the nospam machine name in my email address to send a personal
reply.
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