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My first entry in "Mi-Fi" - Microscale Sci-fi LEGO contest. The purple colour chosen for the background is there to remind the real colour of the track in the movie :-)
A microscale version of one of my favourite Lego sets from 2014, 21109 Exo Suit. Initial design by Peter Reid and brought to life by Mark Stafford.
Pretty happy with it; it’s all legal connections, and I wanted to utilise the Mixel ball joints, but how I wish element 2566 (Plant, Tree Palm Top) were available in a shade of grey.
The 'Saint existed for twenty years as a diplomatic courier, moving information and people between the Core Worlds with limited excitement or incident.
Whilst in the process of turning a scrapyard on Triton into a smelting complex, the industrial magnate Charles Sebastian Forbes discovered the wreck of the 'Saint and commissioned the shipsmiths of Saturn to rescue and refurbish it into his own personal launch. As his businesses expanded into the lawless Galactic Rim, the sturdy Ivory Saint kept the trillionaire and his entourage safe and sound.
Manufacturer: SolSpaceWorks
Model: Model-38 Courier-Craft
Crew: 2 pilots [8 passengers]
Armament: 2 micro-missile launchers (1 forward firing, 1 aft-firing)
Defenses: Duranium Armour Plate, Positronic Shielding.
Some quick tablescrap microbuilds; having never built anything on the standard 16x16 micro city grid.
Just a quick build after I received my bricks from the mail. I love how this came out; I tried to make it look as close to an actual Humvee as possible. What do you guys think?
A microscale version of my SHIP. This is what my SHIP would have looked like if
a) I hadn't lost interest
b) I had enough parts.
: /
Anyway, not a great picture or an incredible MOC, but considering it only took 1 and a half hours, I thought it was okay.
ALSO: I WON'T BE MAKING ANYTHING LARGE UNTIL AFTER AUGUST. I'M STARTING ON HOMEFRONT.
-IronBricks
This is the Lonesome Valkyrie and it's my entry for the Mini Castle Contest IV.
It has a moving wind mill, boats, a cart with horse in the bridge and also a movable drawbridge.
a slightly larger iteration of my previous landscaping, with a little hillock and pretty little beachouse from which to watch the world go by.
The SNOT techniques are basic but effective, IMHO.
The completed LEGO microscale habitat stack is finally here!
Over the past few months I have built a wide selection of 8x8 LEGO microscale habitats and today I'm going to give you a complete overview, including a new polar one and a rework of the OG habitat, the japanese garden.
Here's the video:
Choose your own way
Made for Lug'est labyrinth activity.
Entry is fixed by previous builder. The exit is my choice, let's climb to the top.
As suggested by Miro, some micro Star Wars characters. Of course now I'm thinking about a micro cantina and a micro dewback. *sigh*
Scharnvirk's personal battleship, massive weapon platform perfectly suited for pirate raids on unsuspecting convoys. Armed to teeth with mutliple missile launchers, turrets and heavy beam cannons in front. Brickshelf gallery
I built this for the Micro Sci-Fi Contest on Eurobricks. I've added the TARDIS, the Citadel of the Time Lords, the Mountains of Solice and Solitude, the red grassess and the silver leaves. Let me know what you think, thanks.
Micro-landmarks from around the world.
Due to a lack of space and time I am embarking upon a micro-scale Lego landmark tour of the world.
I’ve made a list of 57 landmarks from 31 different cities. Over half of the landmarks I’ve selected are from one of four cities: New York City, Washington D.C., London, and Paris.
First stop: Big Ben in London
Note: This will be the 4th time I’ve built Big Ben (Each time at a different scale; this model is the smallest version yet). The first two models I built were yellow because at the time tan parts were too expensive.
Next stop: Might as well stay in London: Tower Bridge, Tower of London, Globe Theater, Swiss Re, Buckingham Palace, Westminster Abbey, or St. Paul’s Cathedral?
A microscale modernist family home of my own design, with influences from various mid 20th Century architects.
Scharnvirk's personal battleship, massive weapon platform perfectly suited for pirate raids on unsuspecting convoys. Armed to teeth with mutliple missile launchers, turrets and heavy beam cannons in front. Brickshelf gallery
Over the next few days these awesome builders will slowly be unveiling some of their amazing work in recreating one of the greatest games of all time.
www.flickr.com/groups/2821848@N21/
Join or note the group link here to follow the excitement as this intricate world expands.
These sections show the interior spaces, with the roof of the main house removed.
For more photos, see the full set.
Built for the June Part Challenge at www.flickr.com/groups/part-challenge/.
The Keypart is: Technic, Pin with Friction Ridges Lengthwise WITH Center Slots.
Named after one of the most dangerous predators on Honorous VII, a Rimward colony world originally settled by Eastern European and Japanese colonists, the Tigerhound is as rugged as it's namesake. A modular internal construction allows the ship to take quite the pounding if it's shields fail, though a smart commander of the vessel will utilise the potent, long range cannon to harass enemy capital ships at long range.
It's primary role is that of a scout, commerce raider and escort. During major fleet actions, the Tigerhound can screen larger ships from the assault of enemy fighter swarms, and is nimble enough to stay close and redeploy quick enough. However, in short-range combat with any capital ship of Frigate size or above, a wise commander would withdraw, lest they test the ruggedness of this vessel.
Length: 95m
Crew: 39
Armament: 2 x flak turrets. 1 x Long-range STS cannon.
Computer: Hitachi 76-t-1.