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40 / 365 - 'Hulks'
Continuing on from yesterday, The Magician stands atop a rusting hulk of a frigate, looking down at the dead sailors, as they go about their tasks, unaware they are all dead....
Part Velociraptor, T-Rex, Smaug, and Hulk.
"You guys are crazy, why can't this job be as easy as Star-Lord?!"
-Owen
Another day, another year older... but I've really stopped counting since passing the big 3-0.
Having sold the Hulk last year, I failed to acquire my grail of a AP15300. To make matters worse, I started to really pine for the 116610LV all over again. There is only one way to scratch an itch, and this here is the result.
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Remember those Lego covers DC did a while back? I thought I'd try the same treatment. Get ready for the Hulk, part of the NEW 52!
This is not my model. My brother Mike Asanuma created this model while we were hanging out this weekend.
The only thing modified is a small amount of white stickers for the mouth.
You can read more about it on my Model Building Secrets blog
In this epic scene our big green friend is taking on a battle tank. As we know from the movie it is not going to end well for the tank.
The tank in this little vignette is a slight variation of Tom Netherton's mini tank as can be found here: www.flickr.com/photos/47249637@N05/28605531846
I made some modifications to the turret and the barrel mostly. All credits for the tank go to Tom.
Minifigures have a limited amount of articulation already but to limit the bigfigs is just criminal! C'mon LEGO (or China) make them with movable legs!
I got a Chinese knockoff to customize since I didn't want to cut up my new LEGO Hulk.
Now he can run, jump and SMASH like a proper Hulk!
February Alphabet Fun month 2022 Edition
Today's picture is brought to you by the letter H. It also works in French: Hulk haït les hélicoptères!
The Purton Hulks or Purton Ships' Graveyard are a number of abandoned boats and ships, deliberately beached beside the River Severn near Purton in Gloucestershire, to reinforce the river banks. Most were beached in the 1950s and are now in a state of considerable decay. The site forms the largest ship graveyard in mainland Britain.
A riverbank collapse in 1909 led to concerns that the barrier between the river and the Gloucester and Sharpness Canal would be breached. Old vessels were run aground and soon filled with water and silt to create a tidal erosion barrier. The vessels included steel barges, Severn trows and concrete ships. The boats came from throughout the British Isles and were built in the second half of the 19th century and the first half of the 20th.
Since 2000, archaeological investigations have been undertaken to find out more about the vessels and their states of decay. Explanatory labels have been provided. One barge has been scheduled as an ancient monument and several are included in the National Register of Historic Vessels.
Naughty clever future hulk :)
scarecrow legs. hulk head and body. shortened sensei wu beard and some paint! jobs a good un :)
Minifigures have a limited amount of articulation already but to limit the bigfigs is just criminal! C'mon LEGO (or China) make them with movable legs!
I got a Chinese knockoff to customize since I didn't want to cut up my new LEGO Hulk.
Now he can run, jump and SMASH like a proper Hulk!
In Purton Ships Graveyard on the banks of the River Severn in Gloucestershire.
The Purton Hulks or Purton Ships' Graveyard are a number of abandoned boats and ships, deliberately beached beside the River Severn near Purton in Gloucestershire, to reinforce the river banks. Most were beached in the 1950s and are now in a state of considerable decay. The site forms the largest ship graveyard in mainland Britain.
A riverbank collapse in 1909 led to concerns that the barrier between the river and the Gloucester and Sharpness Canal would be breached. Old vessels were run aground and soon filled with water and silt to create a tidal erosion barrier. The vessels included steel barges, Severn trows and concrete ships. The boats came from throughout the British Isles and were built in the second half of the 19th century and the first half of the 20th.
Since 2000, archaeological investigations have been undertaken to find out more about the vessels and their states of decay. Explanatory labels have been provided. One barge has been scheduled as an ancient monument and several are included in the National Register of Historic Vessels.
...Sometimes I wish I was a Hulk...
INES VAN MEGEN-THIJSSEN PHOTOGRAPHY
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