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In lugnet.year.2001, Nicholas Allan writes:
> Did anyone else notice that in some photos Lego cut baseplates to cram more
> into a scene? Take a look at the following:
> http://www.brickshelf.com/scans/catalogs/1990/c90nl/c90nl-27.html
> Look at the road plates near the police station. You can see a really short
> piece of road between the bend the and T-junction and pavement is only one
> stud wide! Also the multi-storey car park os also pretty close to road
> (another one stud wide pavement).
>
> Then in this scene:
> http://www.brickshelf.com/scans/catalogs/1988/c88eu/c88eu-14.html &
> http://www.brickshelf.com/scans/catalogs/1988/c88eu/c88eu-15.html (double
> page image)
> The T-junction that the breakdown car is passing over carrying the small
> open top car has no-studs wide pavement. Nevertheless, these are very cool
> scenes and I spent hours staring at them and trying to create similar scenes
> in my towns.
Top marks Nicholas! No I didn't know this, but suddenly one of my heretical
pursuits is considerably less heretical. Admittedly I don't tend to cut up
roadplates (haven't got enough of those), I cut up grey baseplates to make
ship decks, but its the principle, is it not :-)
This also explains one of the reasons why my attempts at town planning (when
I was a boy) never seemed to match Lego's chaotic realism.....
Richard
Still baldly wielding a Stanley knife (AKA Exacto knife)...
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