oo7 Posted December 1, 2006 Posted December 1, 2006 M.C. Escher is a Dutch graphic artist famous for his often mathematically inspired woodcuts, lithographs and mezzotints which feature impossible constructions, explorations of infinity, and tessellations. This pioneer's work is still prominent in optical illutions and such today, so prominent that it has made its way into the Lego form along with many others. There are some extra pictures here. I love this stuff. Quote
Kahgarak Posted December 1, 2006 Posted December 1, 2006 I love how the builder made a Technic impossible cube in the 3rd picture. Quote
Starwars4J Posted December 1, 2006 Posted December 1, 2006 This actually has been posted a few times before, but it's always interesting Quote
Eurobricks Emperor Bonaparte Posted December 2, 2006 Eurobricks Emperor Posted December 2, 2006 I always found the stairs (2nd one) very intriguing. First time I see it in lego form. Quote
zanna Posted November 27, 2015 Posted November 27, 2015 Hi guys, I'm happy to show you my last render of my re-creation: Hand With Reflecting Sphere (by M.C. Escher) (1935). Hope you'll like it! Quote
papacharly Posted November 27, 2015 Posted November 27, 2015 Really a great job! And a brilliant idea too. You captured the original setup extremely well. So I like it!! May you please describe your workflow in a few words? I assume that this is a complete and genuine render without any "photoshoping". Right? regards papacharly Quote
Borex Posted November 27, 2015 Posted November 27, 2015 Haha love it! Really good job. You gonna make more? Quote
Pate-keetongu Posted November 27, 2015 Posted November 27, 2015 That's excellent! One of my favourites of Echer's prints. The head choice is perfect. Quote
zanna Posted November 27, 2015 Posted November 27, 2015 Thank you papacharly :) This is the workflow: 1) I built the model with Mecabricks, 2) I rendered the sphere in Blender, with a super-fish eye lens, 3) I rendered the hand (because minifig's arm it's so short! ahah), 4) in Photoshop I merge the images, than I turned the result in BW and I add some grain. Thank you too Borex and Pate-keetongu! Yes, I think I'll re-make some other Escher's models! Quote
papacharly Posted November 27, 2015 Posted November 27, 2015 Many thanks for disclosing your "secrets". Looking forward to some more Eschers. Quote
henrysunset Posted November 28, 2015 Posted November 28, 2015 Take a look at this project I did to re-create the infinite waterfall MC Escher print. http://tomalphin.com/2013/10/lego-challenge-12-impossible-escher.html Quote
zanna Posted November 28, 2015 Posted November 28, 2015 Take a look at this project I did to re-create the infinite waterfall MC Escher print. http://tomalphin.com...ble-escher.html Fantastic henrysunset, your project it's so clean! Quote
TheLET Posted November 28, 2015 Posted November 28, 2015 The work of Escher always captivated me, and seeing his work in Lego from is great. Thanks for sharing this work. Zanna, I'm really impressed with your render, you really captured the atmosphere of the real work. And I really like the way you included the Lego Mona Lisa and the yellow man in the paintings on the wall. Quote
zanna Posted November 29, 2015 Posted November 29, 2015 Thanks for your kind words TheLET :) Now I'm working on something easier, Drawing hands! Stay tuned! Quote
zanna Posted November 30, 2015 Posted November 30, 2015 As I promised... Drawing Hands (1948) by M.C. Escher Quote
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