Skrytsson Posted September 2, 2011 Posted September 2, 2011 183B Pirates of the Caribbean – Dead Man’s chest. The ending scene (almost) when Jack Sparrow is on his own, chained to Black Pearl, and ends up face to "face" to Kraken. From a construction-technique-point of view, this is - by far - the most difficult build I have created. Kraken's mouth with all the teeth were very hard to accomplish. It consists of seven sections with teeth - five of them attached to each other and "the middle" of Kraken, the remaining two attached inside of the "head". Originally I created this MOC in LDD, which were very difficult since LDD often screws up when pieces that are close to each other are not attached. However, I had to do some changes when I build it in real, because of the limits of LDD, but also to make the Kraken more stable. I originally started to build this at the end of June, it was finished first at the end of August = it takes time to build I have presented a prototype version (in LDD) of this creation before: http://www.eurobricks.com/forum/index.php?showtopic=57496 I guess it looks a lot better, when it is build with real bricks, doesn't it? I hope you like my creation! There are reference pictures at the end of the post. Please feel free to take a look at my Flickr if you want. I have built three lego-creations this summer, please take a look at the other two here and here. Hello Beastie 01 by Lego.Skrytsson, on Flickr Hello Beastie 02 by Lego.Skrytsson, on Flickr Hello Beastie 03 by Lego.Skrytsson, on Flickr Hello Beastie 04 by Lego.Skrytsson, on Flickr Hello Beastie 05 by Lego.Skrytsson, on Flickr Hello Beastie 06 by Lego.Skrytsson, on Flickr Hello Beastie 07 by Lego.Skrytsson, on Flickr Hello Beastie 08 by Lego.Skrytsson, on Flickr Hello Beastie 09 by Lego.Skrytsson, on Flickr Hello Beastie 10 by Lego.Skrytsson, on Flickr Hello Beastie 11 by Lego.Skrytsson, on Flickr Hello Beastie 12 by Lego.Skrytsson, on Flickr "Hello, Beastie!" Hello Beastie 13 by Lego.Skrytsson, on Flickr Hello Beastie 14 by Lego.Skrytsson, on Flickr Hello Beastie 15 by Lego.Skrytsson, on Flickr Hello Beastie 16 by Lego.Skrytsson, on Flickr Hello Beastie 17 by Lego.Skrytsson, on Flickr Hello Beastie 18 by Lego.Skrytsson, on Flickr Hello Beastie 19 by Lego.Skrytsson, on Flickr Hello Beastie 20 by Lego.Skrytsson, on Flickr Hello Beastie 21 by Lego.Skrytsson, on Flickr Hello Beastie 22 by Lego.Skrytsson, on Flickr Hello Beastie 23 by Lego.Skrytsson, on Flickr Hello Beastie 24 by Lego.Skrytsson, on Flickr Hello Beastie 25 by Lego.Skrytsson, on Flickr Hello Beastie 26 by Lego.Skrytsson, on Flickr Hello Beastie 27 by Lego.Skrytsson, on Flickr Hello Beastie 28 by Lego.Skrytsson, on Flickr Reference pictures: Here are all my three creations I have done this summer: Quote
Horry Posted September 2, 2011 Posted September 2, 2011 Almighty everlasting bottle of rum - you did it! This one is great! You and Sebeus Iniwum should think about opening a Lego beasty breeding station The scene told in pictures is also great - both in camera-handling as in capturing it in Lego (good to see the countless Sparrow faces being put to good use) - I am smelling that some of the shipyard folks is going to blog this, soon. Quote
Skrytsson Posted September 2, 2011 Author Posted September 2, 2011 Thank you, Horry. It has been blogged by Brothers Brick Quote
Hartfan Posted September 2, 2011 Posted September 2, 2011 WOW !!! That's looks great !!! Amazing MOC ! Quote
Admiral Croissant Posted September 3, 2011 Posted September 3, 2011 Awesome to see this in real! Great job on the kraken The mouth is impressive, the pictures are very clear and the below deck scene is a nice touch as well. [bloggedcp][/bloggedcp] Quote
Skipper Posted September 3, 2011 Posted September 3, 2011 If you'd done this for the competition . . . The photography is excellent as well. Great job. Quote
Tomcat RIO Posted September 3, 2011 Posted September 3, 2011 this one looks great! nice use of techniques and great photography! Quote
Captain Roger Posted September 3, 2011 Posted September 3, 2011 great job. Great recreation of the end of the second movie Quote
Skrytsson Posted September 3, 2011 Author Posted September 3, 2011 Like I mentioned in my first post, the MOC was created in LDD, before I created it in the reality. Almost every time I create a big and/or complicated MOC I start create it in LDD, and when (read: if) I am happy with the result I purchase the parts needed (that I don’t already own) on BL. One important thing to have in mind during the building process in LDD is to always have a window with BL open, so that you can take a look if the part you are about to choose exist in the current colour. Or, you can have LDDManager running, and let that app find out for you. However, the building is often a very long process, and during this process I always make a lot of changes. I always, sometime during the building, end up in a situation where it feels like everything is going to h*ll; I realize that what I have built so far looks bad, that the construction I have created will fall under its own weight in reality (that’s one of LDD’s limits: you can’t know anything about the creation’s stability) or I just have lack of ideas. This picture shows a situation of that type; the first prototypes of the teeth-construction is impossible to attach more teeth to. The mouth-rings just look awful and at this stage I don’t have a clue about how the teeth and mouth are going to be attached to each other. The tentacle looks very clumsy and the back of Kraken looks very hollow. At this stage I hadn’t decided yet what colour theme to use. At this stage, I was happy with Kraken’s teeth, but nothing else. First when I reached this stage, I really decided to continue the building. This picture gives you maybe a clue about how the teeth are attached to the mouth-ring. The following picture is from very late in the building process. I thought it would look better with some tentacles, and therefore I created two small tentacles on the top of Kraken’s head. It looks a bit like rabbit ears The final result: Even though it looks great In LDD, I guess it looks a lot better when it is built with real bricks Quote
Cecilie Posted September 3, 2011 Posted September 3, 2011 I'm glad you built this in real bricks, it looks way better than the LDD version , in fact, it looks totally awesome now . And very nice picture sequence, kind of like a stop motion film . Quote
badboytje88 Posted September 3, 2011 Posted September 3, 2011 I saw this on flickr. It's an awesome MOC. You're a really skilled builder. Quote
lightningtiger Posted September 3, 2011 Posted September 3, 2011 Totally AWESOME creation 'Skrytsson', the detailing on the creature is just so over the top perfect ! Congrats on being front paged too ! Brick On 'Skrytsson'....while drinking rum and not getting eaten by a monster of the sea. Quote
Delta62 Posted September 4, 2011 Posted September 4, 2011 Holy mother of pearl, its beautiful! You did a great job capturing that scene from Priates 2. Quote
XimenaPaulina Posted September 4, 2011 Posted September 4, 2011 Outstanding work Skrytsson! What's even more impressive is how you first started this in LDD and then realizing everything in physical bricks, even the posing are exactly the same! You've really captured the movie scene perfectly, truly an excellent job! Quote
Brickadeer Posted September 4, 2011 Posted September 4, 2011 The build is awesome, and so are the pictures. At first glance, I couldn't believe that all the red and white is actually made of Lego. Quote
TheLegoDr Posted September 4, 2011 Posted September 4, 2011 Very memorable scene and the Lego rendition looks as close to it as Lego-ly possible! The teeth/mouth looks especially impressive keeping it all together like that. Quote
Delta 38 Posted September 5, 2011 Posted September 5, 2011 Wow, that's amazing! Nice how you used LDD to design it too, the digital version is almost identical to the real thing. Definitely a nice display piece. Great work! Quote
MstrOfPppts Posted September 5, 2011 Posted September 5, 2011 As already said in your previous thread with the LDD creation, this must look good in real bricks and it really does. Shame you couldn't complete it for the competition since it'd definitely win you something! I just have one minor problem with your story pics - Jack was cuffed to the mast and not just his hands ... someone has a really nice pic of that in his signature! Quote
JimBee Posted September 5, 2011 Posted September 5, 2011 Excellent MOC, Skrytsson. The Kraken is spot on, and all of the rows of teeth really are faithful to the film. Not only is the MOC great, the presentation is as well. I like how you've sort of played out the scene in your images, and overall the photography is excellent. Amazing stuff you've been building lately. Quote
Big Cam Posted September 6, 2011 Posted September 6, 2011 This is simply outstanding. I love the scene by scene photos you have, it's almost like a mini movie. This is the best presentation of this scene I have seen yet. Quote
derLiebesmuskel Posted September 11, 2011 Posted September 11, 2011 Mr. Skrytsson (or anyone that can answer), First great work on the MOC! I was curious though; I noticed in some of the LDD/real-life comparison shots that you have a hatchet and hammer laying on the deck. How does one place such items like that in LDD? I thought the pieces had to actually "connect." I've never seen a way to simply "drop" something on top of another piece. Thanks. Quote
Skrytsson Posted September 12, 2011 Author Posted September 12, 2011 (edited) Thank you everyone for your comments! I am very happy to see that so many of you really like my creation I just have one minor problem with your story pics - Jack was cuffed to the mast and not just his hands ... True. However, I didn't want to put to much effort in creating a mast etc. The main focus of this creation is the Kraken Mr. Skrytsson (or anyone that can answer), First great work on the MOC! I was curious though; I noticed in some of the LDD/real-life comparison shots that you have a hatchet and hammer laying on the deck. How does one place such items like that in LDD? I thought the pieces had to actually "connect." I've never seen a way to simply "drop" something on top of another piece. Thanks. Yes, the piece need to be attached to another piece in that position. However, I managed to trick LDD by temporary building a construction that attach to the hammer, and then erase all the parts in the construction except for the hammer. Edited September 12, 2011 by Skrytsson Quote
derLiebesmuskel Posted September 12, 2011 Posted September 12, 2011 Yes, the piece need to be attached to another piece in that position. However, I managed to trick LDD by temporary building a construction that attach to the hammer, and then erase all the parts in the construction except for the hammer. Ah, yes. Of course. Thank you. Quote
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