View allAll Photos Tagged Robo
My original robo "White Croud" made it from LEGO
This full action! Various poses can be!
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Robo Rover (9”)
Rover's pedigree is obvious – vintage camp lantern, stereophonic knob paws, hot & cold ears and a tea kettle nose! Our K9 buddy features a hidden storage compartment.
One of my the many amazing Disney treasures we will take a look at over at The Carpetbagger.
Chicago, IL
A tablescrap loosely based off of the game "Mushroom Men: The Spore Wars"
God that was an epic game :)
Exposure: f5.6, ISO100 at 60 seconds
Location: IWay construction site, Providence RI
Date: August 29, 2007 12:41 am
Notes: Shot with Nikon D200 with Nikon 10.5mm
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The usual crew of threshold, rizzolo, skazama and rtlm401 came out to Providence to shoot the IWAY before it's impending opening of the Rte-195 East Bound lanes in November.
Last shot of the night, heavy metal fun. At this point I turned NR off since the exposures were less than 120" .
After finishing the film in my F100 and Holga I allowed the D200 to come out and play. That wasn't until 11pm and the "Late Nighters" stayed until 1:20am... man was beat the next day.
You can see a group pool here of all our shots on Flickr from the night or a slick slideshow here. It may take a week or so for all the shots to be posted.
Holy September 16th! It's nearly Christmas!
Except it's not. But you need to book your Christmas do early if you want feeding in December...
This is the image I came up with for Manchester's Odd, Odder and Oddest Bars' Christmas flyers and menus, which they've released today.
It kind of follows on from THIS ONE that I did last year.
Go HERE for a look at the full menus, and HERE to book yourself a meal that you'll have to wait three months to eat. Think how hungry and excited you'll be by December!
An anachronism unnoticed by our 4-year-old grandson. Silver Lake, Los Angeles. April, 2025.
Cross-view stereophoto.
Detail of oldschool swashy "R" from:
www.flickr.com/photos/48413419@N00/6695881145
This photo was featured in:
www.motaitalic.com/gallery/current/new-vintage-digital-ve...
(Four photos to the right of the elbow in the first photo.)
I do not condone the use of photos that I have taken or comments under said images by any law enforcement agencies or courts or for any legal matters here in the United States or abroad.
This was build for recreate a set contest on LowLUG. I bought the Robo Stalker set a week ago and decided to make my own version of the set.
This picture shows the set and my MOC.
After a small redesign, my robo-athlete moc is now published on Lego Ideas, so if you like it, please support it here: ideas.lego.com/projects/e2aecc9d-4ce1-4109-b518-0b8243a5f2c4
Had this one sitting around for a while now 'cause I didn't want to put it out without finding some way of adding those strange circuity decals and eyes from RoboForce. Its a reinterpretation of 2152, "Robo Raptor." It seemed like an interesting concept to revisit.
Robo Fett: transforms fluidly from a Nintendo 64 game cartridge of Star Wars: Shadows of the Empire, to robotic Boba Fett, and back! Thanks to the advent of Mixels ball and socket joints, I can make my LEGOformers much more articulated and compact. When in cartridge mode, this can fit snugly into the game slot of Ultra Hexacon: the transforming Nintendo 64. When Ultra Hexacon was first released, I created two transforming game cartridges to accompany it: Mecha Kong and Hot-Shot (Donkey Kong 64 and GoldenEye 007, respectively). However a third transforming game cartridge was built but never released: Link 2.0, who transformed into a gold cartridge of Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time. Although Link 2.0 was completed, I ran into problems with applying his game label, which interfered with inserting his cartridge into Hexacon’s game slot. For some reason, his sticker kept peeling off when inserting the game, thus I omitted from the photo shoot due to time constraints. My idea was to eventually retool Link 2.0 to have better clearance for the game slot, but unfortunately I abandoned the project
In early 2016 I decided to pick up where I left off and complete Link 2.0 — however, with its new retooling and transformation cycle, it was impossible for me to have the creation made predominantly of metallic gold pieces, thus I was stuck with having the outer cartridge mainly with the traditional light grey. This meant I had no choice but to base this off a different Nintendo 64 title; after debating back and forth between using Castlevania 64 and Star Wars: Shadows of the Empire (two of my favorite titles), I opted to build games of both — hence, the creation of the Hell Knight.
For making this model in particular, one of the toughest obstacles was making the arches on top of the cartridges: when transformed into robot mode, the arches are on the bottom of the feet, which make the robot have trouble standing up. To fix this, the robot’s legs have retractable toes built with hinge plates. The game’s labels were printed on glossy card stock paper and cut apart with scissors, then glued onto the outer tiles.
A quick entry for the Fallout contest. It didn't turn out that well, I just made it for fun. It isn't minifig scale either....
I borrowed the technique used on the treads from The Slushey One.