View allAll Photos Tagged milleniumfalcon
This photo was taken with a Droid X.
This was taken at the Star Wars exhibit in Seattle, WA at the Seattle Pacific Science Center.
This photo was taken with a Droid X.
This was taken at the Star Wars exhibit in Seattle, WA at the Seattle Pacific Science Center.
How the Falcon looks during the day time with LED running. The LED strip is mounted at the midline of the engine exhaust baffles.
Red Bull Gives you wings:
What we really needed was a chain saw though. This is one of the few decent shots I got from the day having sneaked into someone elses view for a few shots. Love the concept of the event, but unfortunately the Serpentine is pretty well surrounded by trees, so unless you are a local and get there early in the first few 5000, rather than the following 75,000 people, all you can pretty much see for the day is a tree, and people walking around in front of you trying to find somewhere to sit, where you can see whats going off, instead of a tree. Yet get an idea from this shot from the south bank
www.flickr.com/photos/nickstone333/2561691898/
Otherwise your only real way of seeing it is on one of the TV screens further back, and then you may as well save the (travel) expense of going and watch it at home on ITV4 instead.
I would like to do the event again, but only if they have it somewhere the crowd can actually see.
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As the falcon is symmetrical in many ways, I decided to build from the center up and out and essentially copy everything on the lower side. To connect the upper and lower side I'm currently using 2 1x2/2x2 angle plates (azure, I'm sure there's another word for this but I can't remember it) in conjunction with 2x4 tiles (white). The way these connect can be better seen in close-up 2.
This photo was taken with a Droid X.
This was taken at the Star Wars exhibit in Seattle, WA at the Seattle Pacific Science Center.