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10212 Imperial Shuttle out, LEGO Harry Potter pre-order + free shipping [News]

September 2nd, 2010
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The large-scale LEGO Star Wars set 10212 Imperial Shuttleicon unveiled at BrickWorld in June is now available from the LEGO Shop.

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The set includes 5 minifigs and 2503 pieces, and costs 260 USD.

The Harry Potter book series may have come to a conclusion, but the movies continue, with the first half of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows due out later this year. LEGO still has the Harry Potter license, and will be releasing a full line of sets on October 1st (the night of the LEGO Store event at BrickCon, by the way). For those of you not joining us in person, you can pre-order the LEGO Harry Potter sets today.

The fourth LEGO incarnation of Hogwarts Castle (4842)icon includes 10 minifigs and appears to be modular like the previous versions.

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I’m personally most excited by the six new minifigs in 4840 The Burrow:icon

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Again, the full line of six sets is available for pre-order now, and will ship on October 1. (The video games and board game are all available now.)

Finally, LEGO has free shipping on $75 or more from now through September 19th.

LEGO, WEB LINKS

The Battle of Cherbourg in LEGO

August 23rd, 2010
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Immediately after the start of the Normandy invasion on D-Day, Allied forces began a battle for the strategic port city of Cherbourg that lasted more than three weeks. My diorama highlights the aftermath of the battle, when townspeople begin emerging from the rubble, while Free French partisans hoist the Tricolour above their safe house.

The Liberation of Cherbourg (1)

The diorama features an updated version of my M4 Sherman tank:

M4 Sherman tank - V2 (1)

For more photos, check out the photoset on Flickr, and you’ll be able to see this in person in just over a month as part of the Operation Bricklord collaborative display at BrickCon 2010.

LEGO, WEB LINKS

The roles of research, critique, and community in improving LEGO models

August 2nd, 2010
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WW2 Medic (1)Like many LEGO builders, I spent the first decades of my life building in isolation, lucky to get suggestions or critique from a sibling or rare friend who also played with LEGO. But in the last 10 years — particularly the last 5 — the LEGO fan community has grown to include a critical mass of people who build in just about every possible genre.

People with shared interests who spend time together online will inevitably run out of solely positive things to say, and as a result, a culture of constructive criticism has emerged among LEGO fans. Balanced against this impetus to critique everything are the planning and research that individual builders put into what they create. In contrast to the solo building those of us in our 30s did 20 years ago, builders today have a wealth of sources right at our fingertips.

What effects do research, critique, and discussion among community members ultimately have on the quality of the LEGO creations we build and share? Since I’ve been on a bit of a building spree lately (amazing what you can do when your LEGO collection is sorted), I thought I’d step back and share my experience.

Read on, and share your own thoughts in the comments…

Before I set out to create a Dodge WC54 ambulance from World War II, I spent a couple hours finding the best pictures and determining where and when they were actually used during the war. Given that many World War II photos were taken by service personnel and are therefore in the public domain, Wikimedia Commons is a great place to find historical photos.

Historical re-enactors and scale modelers also run dozens of sites that pull together vast amounts of careful research. For both my ambulance and later battalion aid station diorama, I turned frequently to the WW2 US Medical Research Centre.

Originally planning to broaden my D-Day beachhead diorama, I confirmed that WC54s were used at Normandy, and even found a photo of WC54s sitting on Omaha Beach. Good enough to start building.

Targeting 1/35 scale, I translating the real vehicle’s length, height, and width into studs and bricks. Remembering what I’d learned from my wildland fire engine, I built from the top down. I struggled with the front, since I had to combine half-stud offset for the three/five-wide hood with SNOT for the grill and bumper, plus tiles (with no studs to sturdy connections on top) for the fenders.

I figured it out, though, and pleased with my results posted pictures to Flickr:

Dodge WC54 Ambulance (1)

Checking back a while later, I saw a stream of notes from our very own Tim, whose windscreen I’d reverse-engineered for the original ambulance. I gritted my teeth and clicked through. (Honestly, I hate taking criticism, especially when it’s wrong. I’d vented a week earlier that too many of the suggestions to “improve” my M4 Sherman tank took it in more interesting but less historically accurate directions. That’s just plain annoying.)

Tim had seen the mini-rant I’d posted in a Flickr group we both frequent, and his critique was spot on. He made specific suggestions based on the source material I’d used myself, providing solutions where I hadn’t thought the model could be improved. The result is the version I included in my diorama, posted separately below:

Dodge WC54 Ambulance - V2 (1)

The story arc (if you will) started with research, moved through community discussion and critique of the creation itself, and ended with a substantially improved LEGO model. This same story plays out every day in the LEGO fan community today — something that would have been nearly impossible 20 years ago and highly unlikely 10 years ago.

Side note: Looking to future World War II vehicles I might build, I’ll be relying on a copy of World War II AFV Plans: American Armored Fighting Vehicles by George Bradford. I was pleased to discover that I ended up almost 100% to scale (1/35) for my M3 Half-track, even without the book.

American Armored Fighting Vehicles by George Bradford (1) American Armored Fighting Vehicles by George Bradford (2)

Nearly all of the book’s schematics are printed at 1/35 scale, which avoids eyestrain from the WIP-held-against-computer-screen method I’d been using before the book arrived in the mail.

So, what’s your experience with the balance between research or sources of inspiration and constructive criticism?

LEGO, WEB LINKS

Battalion Aid Station, Normandy, June 1944

August 2nd, 2010
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After I built my US Army Dodge WC54 ambulance, it deserved a proper historical context — a Battalion Aid Station in a ruined farmhouse courtyard.

Battalion Aid Station (1)

In the US Army, Battalion Aid Stations are the first line of medical treatment after battlefield first aid by medics or fellow soldiers. Wars of the 20th-century saw many conscientious objectors serving as non-combatants in the American armed forces, often as medics. Army medics served heroically, charging into battle alongside their armed comrades. Eleven received the Congressional Medal of Honor as a result of their actions in World War II.

My Battalion Aid Station is based on historical photographs from the Western Front in 1944 and 1945, after the Normandy Invasion on D-Day. Naturally, I had to convert a couple of the more immersive shots into black and white:

Battalion Aid Station (2) Battalion Aid Station (3)

Though the muddy lane with the M3 half-track and hedgerow was an afterthought — one that nearly emptied my bin of plant pieces — I’m quite pleased with the result:

M3 Half-track and Bocage

Because the subject matter fascinates me so much, I built a great deal of detail into this that you can’t see in a single photo. Check out the photoset on Flickr for more.

(I’ll be discussing some of the build process for my improved ambulance separately, because I think the role of constructive criticism in improving one’s models is something that deserves its own post.)

LEGO, WEB LINKS

Brickmania World War II Battle Pack out now [News]

July 30th, 2010
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Dan Siskind of Brickmania has just released a three-pack of WW2 vehicles, with custom minifigs and accessories. The set includes a German SdKfz 124 Wespe self-propelled artillery, American M8 Greyhound armored car, and British Universal Carrier (better known as the “Bren gun carrier”).

2010 Battle Pack Cover

At $300, the set of three vehicles certainly isn’t cheap, but spending the time — and bricks — to get it right as Dan does for his custom sets isn’t something you can do for only a few bucks. (I built most of my recent American World War II military vehicles from outside my existing collection, so I know it can get expensive just to assemble the necessary parts from half a dozen BrickLink orders.)

I bought a couple of sets last year to see whether they were worth recommending to readers of The Brothers Brick, and I can say unequivocally that they are.

LEGO, WEB LINKS

This post brought to you by the color Dark Red

July 30th, 2010
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Dave Sterling shows dark red some modular love with this lovely city corner building, which illustrates the kinds of realistic, repeated patterns you can achieve by using many of the same parts.

LEGO modular brick building

Click through to MOCPages to see this beauty light up the night.

LEGO, WEB LINKS

Mid-year 2010 LEGO Star Wars sets now available [News]

July 30th, 2010
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The summer/winter (depending on where you live) 2010 LEGO Star Wars sets are now available from the LEGO Shop.

8128 Cad Bane’s Speedericon has five minifigs, including some dude with a really funky hat.

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The big additions are the 8098 Clone Turbo Tankicon (again with the funky hat) and new 8129 AT-AT Walkericon

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Personally, I’m most excited about 8089 Hoth Wampa Caveicon.

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Shipping is free for orders over $75 through the end of July, and remember, the LEGO VIP Program now works for Web orders — two more reasons to support the LEGO fan sites you visit (even if it’s not this one) by buying your LEGO online.

LEGO, WEB LINKS

Hispabrick Magazine 008 is here [News]

July 30th, 2010
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Hispabrick Magazine issue 008 is now available for download in both Spanish and English.

HispaBrick Magazine issue 008

This issue features:

  • Interviews with LEGO owner Kjeld Kirk Kristiansen, Jumpei Mitsui, and many more
  • A minifig-scale paddlewheeler
  • A brief history of LEGO Space
  • How to build a tree
  • Event coverage from all over Europe
  • Lots and lots of Technic and MINDSTORMS

Click the image above for links to the PDF download.

LEGO, WEB LINKS

Micro StarCraft multiplayer map celebrates release of StarCraft II

July 28th, 2010
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This stop-motion video by Alex Kobbs captures so many classic moments from StarCraft that I don’t know which is my favorite.

My copy of Starcraft II: Wings of Liberty is in the mail, and Alex’s video just heightens the anticipation.

LEGO, WEB LINKS

Five years of The Brothers Brick

July 26th, 2010
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The Brothers Brick turns five years old today!

Rather than focusing on changes within the LEGO fan community over this past year, I thought it would be more interesting to explore some of the differences between 2005 and 2010.

Half a decade in the LEGO fan community

When I started The Brothers Brick back on July 25, 2005, the world of LEGO fandom was a very different place. Though LEGO fans had begun to carve out spaces of their own throughout the Internet — mostly on forums like FBTB and Classic-Castle.com — we all posted our photos on Brickshelf and at minimum lurked on LUGNET. BrickCon drew a mere 45 attendees in 2004, while BrickFest ruled the convention scene with 250 attendees in 2004 and 330 in 2005.

How times have changed.

I asked several people what differences they’ve observed over the past five years, and here’s what they had to say.

  • LEGO fandom goes mainstream. The “big boys” at Boing Boing, Gizmodo, MAKE, and other tech/geek sites have shown remarkably steady interest in LEGO, and have even begun crediting builders by name, rather than just throwing up a gallery accompanied by backhanded complements like “This guy must have way too much time on his hands!”
  • Conventions go big. BrickFest was pretty much the only game in town back in 2005. Since then, about half a dozen other conventions have sprung up in the US alone (if I’m counting correctly), ranging from newcomers like BrickMagic to conventions that carry on the name or spirit of BrickFest itself. And then there’s Brickworld, which this year drew 800 attendees. Though I can’t write in detail about events outside the U.S., there’s now a fan convention in just about every major market for LEGO — especially in Europe.
  • More LEGO sets for advanced builders. For at least the past 35 years, LEGO has produced sets for “advanced” builders, ranging from sets like 956 Auto Chassis (which my father had) to UCS Star Wars models. But beginning with 10182 Cafe Corner, LEGO incorporated the type of detailed design aesthetic used by builders like the “rest of us.” In fact, The LEGO Group has started employing more and more designers who started first as fans.
  • The rise of blogs. I was only aware of a couple LEGO blogs when I first started TBB, but there are now more than I can count. Tim says, “With the division of the community into smaller units blogs have filled the place of overarching narratives of the community.” Some blogs have come and gone, but the ease with which sites like Blogger and WordPress.com enable LEGO fans to start their own blog means we’re probably years from seeing this proliferation die down.
  • LEGO video games. Yes, there were plenty of rather horrible PC games throughout the 90’s and early 2000’s, but TT Games has since created an entire genre of games centered around little plastic bricks, while LEGO themselves will be releasing LEGO Universe later this year.
  • LEGO stores everywhere. Okay, not everywhere, as our Canadian and European readers will quickly remind us, but the U.S. is now full of brick-and-mortar LEGO Stores, while Japan has a dedicated chain of LEGO stores in clickbrick.
  • Diversity. LEGO is still very much a hobby dominated by men. But as the hobby itself goes mainstream, more women have begun to contribute to the community. Writes Caylin, “I remember being able to count the amount of women hobbyists (especially online) on one hand. Now there are many, and they’re damn good builders, too. More of them are coming to the hobby because they want to — not because their partner or kids are into it.”

With a few exceptions, the overarching theme among these changes is decentralization and greater choice for LEGO fans. We’ve all worried about the fragmentation of the LEGO fan community, but so far what we seem to be experiencing is growth — with the specialization that comes with that growth.

Let’s hope we see even more growth over the next five years.

All about you, by the numbers

As always, here are some stats for this past year.

  • 2,500 registered readers
  • 8,000 subscribers to the RSS feed
  • 5,122,594 visits
  • 9,702,180 page views
  • 1,537,027 unique visitors
  • 1,100 new posts

We’re still waiting for our first reader in North Korea…

The Brothers Brick Year 5

The top 30 countries from which people visit The Brothers Brick didn’t change much, though New Zealand jumps quite a few places (up 73%), while the Czech Republic (up 64%) and Croatia (up 172%) edge out Malaysia and South Korea.

  1. United States
  2. United Kingdom
  3. Canada
  4. Germany
  5. Australia
  6. Netherlands
  7. France
  8. Italy
  9. Spain
  10. Poland
  1. Japan
  2. Sweden
  3. Belgium
  4. Denmark
  5. Hungary
  6. Singapore
  7. New Zealand
  8. Hong Kong
  9. Switzerland
  10. Norway
  1. Brazil
  2. Finland
  3. Portugal
  4. Taiwan
  5. Ireland
  6. Mexico
  7. Austria
  8. Russia
  9. Czech Republic
  10. Croatia

Like last year, search engine keywords seem to be mostly about news items, while more and more of our traffic comes from fellow LEGO sites rather than sites outside the LEGO fan community.

Top Keywords* Top Categories Referring Sites
  1. LEGO blog
  2. LEGO news
  3. LEGO Atlantis
  4. LEGO Fire Brigade
  5. 2010 LEGO sets
  6. LEGO 8683
  7. LEGO 2010
  8. LEGO blogs
  9. LEGO
  10. LEGO 10210
  1. Star Wars
  2. Military
  3. Mecha
  4. ApocaLEGO
  5. Minifigs
  6. Steampunk
  7. Castle
  8. Building Techniques
  9. Space
  10. Dioramas
  11. Bionicle
  1. StumbleUpon
  2. Flickr
  3. Gizmodo
  4. Eurobricks
  5. Facebook
  6. BrickArms
  7. From Bricks to Bothans
  8. BZ Power
  9. Brickset
  10. MAKE Online

* Excluding variations on “The Brothers Brick”.

Most of the top 10 posts over this past year were again news items — the most devastating among them the loss of a prominent member of the LEGO fan community.

  1. Pictures of 2010 LEGO sets – Atlantis, Toy Story, & more – at Festival RFFL
  2. Howl’s Moving LEGO Castle
  3. LEGO 8683 Collectible minifigures coming June 2010
  4. Farewell to a Legend: Mourning the passing of Nate “nnenn” Nielson
  5. Announcing LEGO Pirates 10210 Imperial Flagship, available Jan 1, 2010
  6. Dalí + Halsman + Balakov
  7. Stefan’s micro Star Trek fleet is ready to make first contact with the Borg
  8. Should LEGO release modern military sets?
  9. LEGO Atlantis – first high-res pics of 2010 sets
  10. 10213 Shuttle Adventure blasts off in June

Finally, stuff for the historically minded:

LEGO, WEB LINKS