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Everything posted by eurotrash
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Winter Village: First Aid / Search & Rescue cabin
Nice work - I think the color combo works well and that interior is chock full of details and stuff. I particularly like the use of the light brick and the patients broken leg. There does seem to be a lot of carnage in the scene so it's a good job that the Winter Village does have a First Aid station - although the patients seem to be outnumbering the mobile! Good luck and thanks for sharing it with us!
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MOC: "The GreenHouse" Modular
That colour combo really pops! There's some great stuff going on here daisy. You might have more space if you make the greenhouse attached to the greenhouse (with a larger single slope, rather than as a twin-slope) BTW where was your cousin's Florist shop in Toronto? I spent two years living in the Beaches there and wondered if it was on Queen St.
- Winter Village: Dorp
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MOC: Modular Pharmacy & Doctors
Amazing! There's so much detail to take in and there's some incredible techniques that you've used. I will be spending hours over the flickr set trying to reverse engineer some of the tricks that you've used. Thanks for sharing it with us.
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MOC: NS 1847 - Mainline Electric of the Dutch Railways
Wow! I was checking this against images of the actual NS 1947 (http://farm5.staticf...4c43746ea_b.jpg). I think you nailed it! Great job and that front end looks perfect. Thanks for sharing it with us!
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What are you listening to?
Yep, some 70's rawk for a Friday night!
- MOC: my blue cafè
- Winter Village: Hot Sausage Shop w/ Roasted Chestnut Seller, Snowball
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Lego Farm ideas
What it needs is a Greenhouse! Although it should be able to do better than this one (of mine) http://www.eurobricks.com/forum/index.php?showtopic=76636
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Lego Farm ideas
I'm completely digging this! It looks excellant and it's obvious that a lot of thought has already gone into the details. I particularly like the field of corn being harvested. Thanks for sharing it with us.
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MOC: Classical 4wide rescue vehicles (Bunch of photos)
Generally, it's difficult to get the proportions and details right in a 4-wide as it's not a very forgiving width to use, but in this case I really like what you've done. I think you've created a good range of vehicles here and I think there's some great detail work Farnheim. I particularly like the second vehicle. Thanks for sharing it with us!
- Palace Cinema 26-Seater Auditorium Mod
- Winter Village: OutHouse
- Winter Village: Jewelry Store
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Liebherr T 282B
Good Grief! That is epic. You dont really get a sense of the true scale until the end of the video, but it's enormous. Do you know how many bricks it contains? And what are the dimensions and weight? Thanks for sharing it with us and I can't wait to see your next creation...
- Winter Village: Cafe
- [MOC] The Lumber House
- The price of a Brick
- 10232 Palace Cinema
- [MOC] Pick-up!
- 10232 Palace Cinema
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MOD/MOC of 7744 Police Station - A work in progress
It's looking really good! As for 'advice/ideas on external details' all I can say is that greebling the building is a definitely an art rather than a science - you've just go to try things and be prepared to rip them out again, but perhaps some of these may be useful (http://www.bricklink.com/catalogItem.asp?P=2877 Brick, Modified1 x 2 with Grille) to give texture? Thanks for sharing it with us!
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MOC: LDD Modular Platform design
That exploded view makes a lot more sense. It's a very effective design you've got going on there. Thanks for sharing it with us.
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MOC: The Metro Station Bar (Modular)
A couple of things that I did notice when mixing bricks from the 90's to those currently available were: The sticking power (the clutch) of the 90's is considerably less than today's bricks. I would not use them in any heavy-stressed area (failure apparently is an option! ). That bright yellow colour was consistent throughout all the 90's bricks, but there was considerable variation in today's equivalents - even across bricks of the same size. There were noticeable inter-brick gaps and corner-rounding issues with the 90's bricks when I constructed a wall length. The bricks came from a set that has not been heavily used/chewed & abused and I'm wondering whether today's bricks are built to much finer tolerance and are more rectilinear. Thanks for reading. As I said it was a fun transformation!
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Fire
I like it! It has a very kinetic feel to it. Thanks for sharing it with us.
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