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This is my party for the Greymane's Haven Adventuring Guild ongoing challenge hosted over on @greymane_guild on Instagram! As these characters have come together, you may have noticed the theme: they're all monstrous! Or monstrous-adjacent. You get the gist. For their story, read on!

 

Though a great many people live in the main cities of the realm, and a great and diverse cast of characters bustle about their busy streets, there are a few individuals the common people would... rather not do business with, to say the least. An indisputably large portion of these folk come from the village of Montown, nestled in the heart of the Oarbrook Forest. Montown is a place that can be described a number of different ways, depending on who you ask. To some, it is a place of ill repute, where only the desperate go to work. To others, it's a trifle that doesn't deal enough in actual currency of the civilized world to justify trade with. To more yet still, Montown is a home, when much of the world bristles in the presence of their kind. Inhabited by all manners of mortals, the village holds a rather prodigious population of people hailing fron heritages commonly classified as "monstrous" or "exotic," including orcs, minotaurs, kobolds, tabaxi, bugbears, and much, much more. What much of the realm sees as a cesspool full of brigands, charlatans, and ne'er-do-wells, many of these folks see as a haven where they don't need to sanitize their looks, behavior, or even cuisine to fit in.

 

Coming from this boisterous settlement, we find the heroes of the moment: the Montown Mob. A group of four adventurers well-known in their birthplace for being effective, if a little chaotic, this party is one whose got its sights set on the Greymane's Haven Adventuring Guild. When the call went out for a force of heroes to rise up and oppose the coming threat of the returning Lich King, four brave and lightly demented individuals rose to the occasion to put Montown on the map, and bring respect to their kin. There's Sythil, the Lizardfolk Ranger with a knack for carving bones, Marybeth, the Kenku Barbarian with an unsettling intense demeanor, Borgoop, the Plasmoid Monk who can't ever seem to disappear without leaving a trace, and Pushnik, the Goblin Cleric whose patience when it comes to steering his allies down the right path seems without end. When a situation gets grave, Marybeth is always ready to plunge headfirst into danger. When the way forward is obscured, none know strategy and a path to victory quite like Sythil. When the party is pushed to its breaking point, no one is quite as flexible or full of new ideas as Borgoop. And when the antics of those three nearly land them plummeting off the edge of a cliff, well, it's Pushnik's sage wisdom and sound heart that keep them alive to continue the good work. Though the party has a long ways to go before taking on any truly great evils, it's safe to say: the Lich King will never know what exploits to expect from the Montown Mob. And frankly, neither will Pushnik.

I would assume Mr. Craig Callum's (@cforcraig) "Old Red" Ford Model A Coupe hardly needs any introduction by now, even if you don't know the real car, you may have seen it amongst Hot Wheels' new releases this summer.

 

Speaking of knowing, while searching for a suitable facial expression for the minifig, I eventually settled on this one and to my eternal shame, I have to confess I did not know it ACTUALLY IS the Lego representation of Mr. Craig 😮.

 

And one thing about the build — at one point in 2017, after the Speed Champions #75875 Ford hot rod set was released (yes, Mr. Craig had something to do with that), I've built an alternate of the hot rod using mudguards pieces — not because it needed mudguards, but because I wanted really bad to have that nice curve of the vestigial socket, where the mudguard of the stock car goes. There were no elements available to fit the mudguard under the curve of the trunk exactly where I wanted it and even the way I did it, I still had to cheat with bits of sticker to completely fill the gap. Well, now it's finally possible to do it exactly how I wanted it then, and these new curves I used here for the trunk deliver a very slender result, imo.

This is one of my entry to the Bricklink Designer Program Series 6. I appreciate all votes and comments:

 

www.bricklink.com/v3/designer-program/series-6/2092/Drago...

 

I love the dark creatures of fantasy movies and therefore I decided to design a black dragon to Bricklink Designer Program series 6. It is not actually based on an existing character, I was inspired by some cool AI generated pictures and some cool dragon head builds, but I built something brand new. I wanted to create a movable animal instead of a static statue and added a small tower and two wizards to the set for more playability options.

I designed a climbing gym made with Lego bricks. It is submitted on Lego Ideas.com. If it will gather 10000 supporters, it will gain the chance to become an official Lego set.

In only two weeks, it already gathered more than 1000 supporters and keep growing. The next milestone is at 5000 and it will give more time to the project.

With your help it might become reality!

Just take a couple of minute of your time, click the link below and find out all the cool details of the build! I hope you will enjoy it and you will login and support it!

ideas.lego.com/projects/253a4743-4f5d-4c58-b767-700a38a09208

Welcome to my new big MOC of 2019: "Berlin Friedrichsberg-Kreuzhain - Studio 19"

I built 2 square meters of LEGO City - a fictional place in my hometown of Berlin including a movie studio.

It took some months of work - November'18 till March'19 to be ready for its first exhibition.

 

"Danger Hot Stuff" - my cities' fashion store. The sticker are from a Ninjago movie advertisement sticker sheet

 

Even though two people who commented on previous progress photos implied they knew the identity of the building, neither actually named the building....

 

This image shows the vertical Art Deco details that extend up to the second floor on the buildings piers after I simplified them to more closely represent the real building. While there are only three chevrons per pier compared to the real building's seven, this is about as good a representation as I am going to get and still keep the size in proportion.

 

This section corresponds to the rightmost part of the building partially visible in the previous photo of the real structure.

A lone knight enters the ruins of an old church now serving as the command post of a Orc chief. The knight has only one goal in mind, to slay all in his path until the chief is dead.

It is a modular fish market sized 64x32 studs comprising seven pavilions and few bridges. The market is divided into wet goods and dry goods zone, with shops ranged from fish stalls, flower shop and grocery stores at Ground, and cafe and restaurant on the 1st Floor. Vibrant Coral and Dark Azur are adopted as colour palette of the design. Built with several types of window frames, a huge canopy provides weather proection to the people below. Enjoy shopping and eating with proper distancing!

Tanks lowered, splashers added, running board extended, cab detailed, trimline added. I’m fine with calling this done :)

MOC hosting an architecture firm. Lobby and exhibition on ground floor and studio on first floor.

My LEGO replica of the Ford building on display in the lobby of the real Ford Building in Detroit. On November 12, 2009, a party was held to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the building.

 

I got to meet the owner of the real Ford Building and his son at the party. Thomas Paglia Jr. purchased the Ford Building in a auction for mere $1 million in 1992. He restored the building and returned it to viability. The occupancy rate has been reported to be about 85% which is impressive considering the overall conditions in city.

The Village Post Office is my first new MOC for over a year. A classic British Post Office set during the early 1930's. The model is not a modular building but features an open back design to give easy access to the interior details.

 

The model is now on LEGO IDEAS. f you like to vote for the model to be made in to a real set then please visit ideas.lego.com/projects/16ae1e95-cf30-41dd-ae23-36e07668df05

 

Thanks very much.

Sorry if it's blurred. I need to find a better render program. :/

 

Support the iScream Ice Cream set into becoming a Lego Product at the Lego Ideas website. Here's a shortcut:

ideas.lego.com/projects/320444b3-b98c-4c5b-adb6-b1bb2867414e

 

I scream! You scream! We all scream for ice cream! This set features an ice cream parlor designed by yours truly, RoboXpert. (Btw, you can see my Minifigure from my logo cleaning a table in the building.) This set took me two days to design and has over 1,261 Lego pieces. It has 19 Minifigures, a dog, and a cat.

 

The first thing you'll notice on the iScream parlor is the iScream sign as well as all the other wonderful detail put into this build. If you look real close, you'll see that those ice cream cones outside are really lights for when night falls. There are tables and chairs seated around the building for those who just have to enjoy their delicious ice cream outside. If you go inside, there is a beautiful floor design where the guests eat/order as well as a nice floor kitchen design for the employees. Of course, it wouldn't be iScream without ice cream, so there are many flavors to try! You truly will scream when you see iScream!

Son of Bengel Oathbreaker, heir apparent to the throne, wielder of Beleg’s Hammer, Captain of the Oath’s Order.

 

The gates are shut. Beren’s father has left all those that lie beyond the walls of the City of Spires to perish at the maw of the approaching horde. Beren leads a defiant group of renegade knights beyond the walls as the last line of defense against the coming shadow.

 

My entry for the #legoknightcontest2025 by @thelegomatic and @sword.bricks! Not usually a minifig builder, but this was a fun exercise.

Collaboration with @igors.legobuilds

 

Instruction for it is now available on my YT channel!

 

Follow me:

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►BJIuD. Zero. | YouTube2: www.youtube.com/channel/UClzmNpvIwPViK4Urq7_eh-Q

 

Follow @igors.legobuilds (PomEdor):

►PomEdor | Instagram:https://www.instagram.com/igors.legobuilds/

My first build for the Star Wars Factions RPG.

 

Due to the limited resources and troops of the Ashlon Empire, they payed off the local gang the Dilary Brotherhood to attack the planet’s corporate security. Seeking to weaken the corporate forces and secure supplies for there eventual take over of Terminus, Ashlon has the Brotherhood focus its efforts on stealing supplies and weapons. My build depicts a corporate run supply depot under attack by members of the Dilary Brotherhood.

I’m sloooooowly learning that it’s all about accenting details. You can have great trains, but a weak layout doesn’t show them off well. Grateful for everyone being so open to my questions and neediness for advice lol

The model features the same details , like the normal one: a detailed interior with seat for 2 minifigures, steering wheel, handbrake, the shifter for the manual gearbox and a suggested V8 engine at the back.

This Competizione version is more tacetrack oriented so it fetures bigger rear wing, front splitter with support rods, clear headlights and completely different hood with bigger ait outlets.

These additional details to the existing model, meant some tricky challenges, mostly on the front.

 

Instructions for my 8 stud wide style Ferrari F40 Competizione are now available at my Rebrickable page together with the normal version:

rebrickable.com/mocs/MOC-107383/Gubi_Systems/ferrari-f40-...

  

I've dreamed of building the Swiss Family Robinson Treehouse ever since I first saw the movie as a kid.

 

Now, in Lego, I have!

 

Here it is: the most iconic treehouse of all time!

 

Support this project and you can have your very own Falconhurst Treehouse.

ideas.lego.com/projects/e299db50-89bc-41e5-a69d-1f51520093e4

 

Designing this set was an awesome challenge. My first attempt completely fell apart. Three months later, after redesigning everything, I was done with a solid model. You might think that this set will break apart, but the building techniques used, invisible in the finished model, make it extremely strong, even to the end of every branch. Technic pieces connect the green base to the inside of the tree and into the floor of the main treehouse. From top to bottom this set is solid. There has never been a Lego set anything like this so support it and make it a reality!

 

The treehouse has lots of great functions. The stairs fold up, just like in the movie. There is a trap door you can open and close in the floor of the main treehouse; the roof of each treehouse comes off easily so you can play inside each hut; the right treehouse opens in the front so you can set things up without taking off the roof. And there are lots of great details, like the bunk bed, ships steering wheel, shelves with books and trinkets, a small organ and so much more.

 

It comes with six minifigures, two dogs, and two monkeys. The minifigures are Mr and Mrs Robinson, Fritz, Ernst, Roberta or "Bertie" and Francis.

 

It consists of about 2,730 pieces and most are really small, but with the use of parts that currently don't come in the colors needed for the treehouse (mostly reddish brown and dark brown) this count could easily be reduced. It is an impressive set that fits nicely on the corner of my desk.

A family of ghosts for the Lego Ideas contest "build a ghost that you're afraid of"

 

Meet mister Xavier van Thom, an accountant at the ministry of manicing and his wife Griselda van Thom, a former writer of horror novels and their son Boo who wants to become a boogeyman and of course Baby Rosie, a cutie and their family dog Boney

It's big. All Lego but for the wings skin, that's cardboard

Build for Ozymandias' layer from the Watchmen comic series. Used it for a photo series I uploaded on Instagram.

After 22 months of off and on construction, the LEGO Guardian Building is complete. The model is 8 feet (2.46 meters) high to the roof. The building's base measures 136 x 48 LEGO studs.

A cobbled mix of a few different references I found. Not a lot of experience building vehicles, but this was a fun one.

THE LICH'S LAIR.

 

Here we have my third entry into the #halloweenhabitats25 and #letsbuildhalloween2 challenges over on Instagram! Again, continuing the theme of undead D&D enemies, we have a lich in his lair. I tried multiple tile patterns before eventually settling on this one, attempting to convey the grandiose taste of a creature that pursues eternal life/undeath. If there's one thing liches have, it's a flair for the dramatic, right? Collected in the lich's lair, we see a bit of everything, including some of his favorite trinkets, one of his favorite spells, a lovely still-life from one of his favorite artists, his grimoire with his nastiest and most profane magic, and of course, the captured souls of many adventurers which he'll use to one day feed his phylactery! Clearly, he's brought some more with thim, however--I wonder where he'll find the space to store them? As always, for lore: read on!

 

In the world of D&D, liches are powerful spellcasters who have taken on the mission to learn and conduct dark, unholy rituals that tether their soul permanently to their body, even after death. While their spirits inhabit their bodies, the flesh and its innards continue to rot away, leaving the lich with a rather macabre visage. They often dress themselves in fineries, which convey the quality of enlightenment they tend to claim they've achieved in their abominable state of being. Liches undergo the process of trapping their souls within a vessel known as a phylactery, which they often keep heavily guarded, or even hidden and inconspicuous, to avoid being destroyed by self-righteous heroes. To destroy a lich's phylactery is to destroy its safety net of regenerating after its physical form is slain. Thus, it is left vulnerable, and capable of being extinguished. A lich will fight with all its might to avoid having its broader ambitions cut short by a setback such as being slain again, and will employ devastating magic and traps to deter intruders that would infiltrate its lair.

Бріксон Тауер // “Brickson Tower”

New Hashima: Sector 02 Inner City

Sometimes people ask me if I glue my LEGO models together. The answer is definitely no!

I built this model of Detroit's David Stott building in 2006. About three years later LEGO came out with new colors: Dark Tan and "Carmel". The original David Stott Building was designed with several bands of terra cotta ornament on the upper floors that got progressively lighter as one got closer to the top of the skyscraper. I replaced the lowest of these tan colored bands on my model with these new colors to make it closer to the original in concept. Since The LEGO Company has not seen fit to provide a larger variety of parts in these new colors I had to use a combination of them. This mottled appearance represents the fact that the real building really needs a good external cleaning. If I had glued the model together I would have been stuck with my first less accurate version.

 

The above picture shows the upper half of my David Stott model in my LEGO building storeroom.

Welcome to my new big MOC of 2019: "Berlin Friedrichsberg-Kreuzhain - Studio 19"

I built 2 square meters of LEGO City - a fictional place in my hometown of Berlin including a movie studio.

It took some months of work - November'18 till March'19 to be ready for its first exhibition

 

Singing booth

I've dreamed of building the Swiss Family Robinson Treehouse ever since I first saw the movie as a kid.

 

Now, in Lego, I have!

 

Here it is: the most iconic treehouse of all time!

 

Support this project and you can have your very own Falconhurst Treehouse.

ideas.lego.com/projects/e299db50-89bc-41e5-a69d-1f51520093e4

 

Designing this set was an awesome challenge. My first attempt completely fell apart. Three months later, after redesigning everything, I was done with a solid model. You might think that this set will break apart, but the building techniques used, invisible in the finished model, make it extremely strong, even to the end of every branch. Technic pieces connect the green base to the inside of the tree and into the floor of the main treehouse. From top to bottom this set is solid. There has never been a Lego set anything like this so support it and make it a reality!

 

The treehouse has lots of great functions. The stairs fold up, just like in the movie. There is a trap door you can open and close in the floor of the main treehouse; the roof of each treehouse comes off easily so you can play inside each hut; the right treehouse opens in the front so you can set things up without taking off the roof. And there are lots of great details, like the bunk bed, ships steering wheel, shelves with books and trinkets, a small organ and so much more.

 

It comes with six minifigures, two dogs, and two monkeys. The minifigures are Mr and Mrs Robinson, Fritz, Ernst, Roberta or "Bertie" and Francis.

 

It consists of about 2,730 pieces and most are really small, but with the use of parts that currently don't come in the colors needed for the treehouse (mostly reddish brown and dark brown) this count could easily be reduced. It is an impressive set that fits nicely on the corner of my desk.

Welcome to my new big MOC of 2019: "Berlin Friedrichsberg-Kreuzhain - Studio 19"

I built 2 square meters of LEGO City - a fictional place in my hometown of Berlin including a movie studio.

It took some months of work - November'18 till March'19 to be ready for its first exhibition

 

Band recording room

In the glittering dark of the galaxy there spins a worthless remote planet. Its inhospitable craggy surface only matched by the poison in its air. Above, orbits a silent corporate branded haven. The Vitruvius Space Station.

 

Inside, a lone technician stares in horror at the bank of security screens. A facade of life lurks in a distant hallway, silently waiting. Unnervingly still, it calculates its next opening to strike.

 

Long had the Weyland-Yutani Corporation tried and failed to manipulate the bio engineering practices of the xenomorph species. Long had they known failure.

 

However, another idea of malicious obsession arose. The company already had a sizable investment in synthetic androids to maintain authority on stations, ships, and colonies. Perhaps if the creatures’ behavior is what led to such prior loss of containment, a ground up rebuild would be necessary.

 

Building the prototype was relatively simple. The organic brain scanned and copied. The duplicate manufactured and tweaked to respond to company programming. Nurture would supplant nature.

 

What they had not known, is that in the digital sequencing, the strange Chemical A0-3959X.91 would be included within the synthetic genome. What they had not noticed, was the slow and methodical corruption of their next ‘perfect’ experiment.

 

The black goo had transcended organics. A self evolving and degenerating sentience within the machine. A virus. The reversion back to mimicry of its base animal instincts took little time. For the science crew, loss of control was all the quicker.

 

Out of the maddening quiet comes a shrieking din. A proximity alarm. A new ship prepares its docking harness. The cybernetic creature stirs for the first time in what feels like an eternity. Its mechanical frame shudders as it begins the hunt for its next kill.

 

Inspired by a weekend rewatch of all the alien movies and finally seeing ALIEN: Romulus

The Comerica Tower looms in the foreground of the MichLTC display.

 

This LEGO train layout was put up by the Michigan Lego Train Club in the Family Fun Zone of the Canton Liberty Fest June 18-20, 2009.

The Michigan Lego Train Club put up a large 20 x 30 foot display at the Owosso Train Festival - July 23-26, 2009.

 

Part of the city portion of the MichLTC display.

Just figured out the luminous colours, looks much better now.

A view of the upper stories of my Lego replica of the Griswold building. The prototype was designed by Albert Kahn in 1929. It was originally an office building and was later converted to senior apartments in circa 1980.

 

Update:

In 2014, the real building was revamped and renamed "The Albert". The former residents were asked to leave and the newly renovated apartments are being marketed to young professionals who can afford the $1,200 to $2,300 monthly rent.

A Neo Fabuland Fire Station

 

This build is part of a larger display I built in 2025, revisiting and expanding on the concept of Neo Fabuland—a reinterpretation of the classic Fabuland aesthetic, much like how Neo-Classic Space draws inspiration from the original Classic Space theme. If you’re curious, you can read more about the goals of the project here.

 

All six builds for this display are now complete, but so far I have only posted three sections, Padbrook Town, Maximillian’s Watermill and Hilltop Station, and this is the fourth one I completed.

 

This build is not inspired by an existing Fabuland set. It features a fire station building with observation tour, a fire engine and rescue in progress.

 

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