Monday, 21 March 2016

A 1st Lego Olympics?

Groups of students from all over the world are coming together in St Louis at the end of April for an event being dubbed by some as the first LEGO® Olympic Games, the first LEGO® League World Festival.
Courtesy of Geekadelphia
A special kind of games is being developed here since generally speaking, some LEGO® based Olympic events may be particularly problematic. One only has to think of the potentially dangerous nature of Olympic diving and the pole vault to realise that some LEGO® based events might not be such a good idea. A pole vaulting event that was comprised entirely of LEGO® bricks for example could be potentially fraught with many difficulties not the least being that the pole itself would almost always invariably break, leaving injured contestants lying below the bar, covered in LEGO® and moaning in pain. Not a great moment for the Olympics or LEGO®.
A LEGO® diving competition could be even more disastrous since diving from any significant height into a pile of LEGO®-brick-water would be enough to chafe more than one's ego, not to mention the inevitable collapse of the LEGO® diving board on the way down. Again, this sort of event would create more in-patients than it would gold medalists and should in no way be encouraged. On the other hand, the LEGO® weight lifting contest however would be remarkably easy one would have to think and the hurdles wouldn't hurt so much, but all in all its not a particularly spectacular idea.
So what the hell am I talking about you may ask?
The LEGO® League World Festival is a global robotics program initiated as a joint venture between LEGO® and First. Its aim is to bring young children together from around the world to engage in solving real-world problems using LEGO®, robotics and engineering concepts.
Courtesy of Madein Limburg
The event itself has been dubbed the LEGO® equivalent of the Olympics however with more than 230,000 children competing from over 80 different countries. Australia's team will be competing with the best of the best and volunteers are always required.
Montana Governor Steve Bullock summed up the reasons behind supporting children at this early age quite nicely.
"When we take a look at the availability and the opportunity for science, technology, engineering and math jobs in our state, we need to be building the pipeline. You don't wait until the kids are in college or thereafter, you begin to get them engaged now. The level of creativity and what they're building are skills that not only will keep them engaged in school, but will open up horizons for all kinds of opportunities in the future,"
Courtesy CFFLL
Whether the first robotics league ever makes it to the actual Olympics is irrelevant. The feeling surrounding this event is that the LEGO® company is again on the verge of something that could be big and will at the least impact the world in a positive way, seeking to implement change among tomorrow's generation, where so much of the world's hope lies.
Brickman Dan
Brickman Dan is the founder of Brick Yourself and publishes regular articles on how LEGO® Art & Design, as well as LEGO® Investment.

Sunday, 20 March 2016

Golden Age of Gaming Revisited By LEGO® Dimensions

LEGO® Dimensions was released last September and there have been a number of interesting releases within the Dimensions series so far.
Some of their themes including the Simpsons and Back to the Future have not been particularly successful in their appeal however others like Doctor Who, Portal 2 and Ghostbusters have been much more well received and generally regarded as being more fun.

The Lego Dimensions World - courtesy of Lego(R)
This particular LEGO® Dimensions version involves battling out various old school levels and bosses through LEGO® generated scenes and sequences. Some are more fun than others while some hold out much better over time. One interesting review comment suggested that the further back in time a game actually went, the better it holds up. One only has to look at Pong to see the plausibility of this statement, at least to some degree.
Courtesy Emu Paradise
The main games actually covered in this Dimensions release are  720°, Badlands, Blasteroids, Championship Sprint, Defender, Defender II (aka Stargate), Gauntlet, Gauntlet II, Klax, Joust, Joust 2, Marble Madness, Paperboy, Rampage, Road Blasters, Robotron: 2084, Spy Hunter, Super Sprint, Timber, Toobin’, Cyberball, Vindicators, and Xybots.
Courtesy of Metro
Finally, the LEGO® set also comes with its very own gamer kid and arcade machine which looks absolutely amazing and goes even further toward capturing what will forever be known as the golden age of the video game.
Brickman Dan
Brickman Dan is the founder of Brick Yourself and publishes regular articles on how LEGO® Art & Design, as well as LEGO® Investment.

Thursday, 17 March 2016

Designing Custom Lego Figures Part 1

HOW TO DESIGN CUSTOM LEGO® MINI-FIGURES
ACH!!!One-of-a-KindJudge-MoodySpiked-Striker
In this very special look inside the Brick Yourself design process, we’re pleased to release this article in conjunction with the premiere of Brick Yourself’s new Brick Yourself pictures. These pictures are available for public display and can be viewed more thoroughly in our gallery.
PART 1:
CUSTOM LEGO® MINIFIGURES
There are many types of custom Lego® minifigures. The term is given to any figures designed specifically in the image of someone, be they a notable character or otherwise.  As far as standard, (or non-custom Lego® Minifigures go), design for minifigure characters initially was a very generic, smiling person. Over the years the faces began to develop reaching the diversity and complexity of the figures Lego currently produce.
The characters have in the past generally been dictated by different themes  e.g. Batman, Star Wars, Pirate. But over the last few years, the Lego® group has released a veritable feast of minifigures each representing a character in society or fiction in some way. These figures can be viewed as being their own theme and as a result Lego figures became much more adept in its personalisation of minifigures and in this sense become far more relatable to society.
Hipster-WolverineMuscled-w-logo
The next stage in this evolution is to customise the mini-figures to individuals and this is where you’ll find Brick Yourself: At the forefront of the custom Lego® frontier. Going boldly where no-one has gone before. We aim to design figures that are artistic in a fun and exciting process of collaboration with the client.  
WHAT EXACTLY ARE CUSTOM LEGO FIGURES?
You can describe custom figures in many ways, but what they are essentially and fundamentally can only be described as highly specific pieces of art. They capture aspects of reality in unique ways, while expressing certain truisms about the subject. Though the figures can be small, the shear quantity of available parts make the design and research  process quite challenging.
Brickman Dan
Brickman Dan is the founder of Brick Yourself and publishes regular articles on how LEGO® Art & Design, as well as LEGO® Investment.
RapentrepeneurSnowboarderSmug-Businessman-Outline-PNG-24
In Part 2: How to design the perfect mini-figure and what goes into it.  

Insights into How to Design Custom Lego Minifigures Part 2

PART 2: How to design the perfect mini-figure and what goes into it:

Violinist


Star-Wars-Family

There are many aspects involved in the successful customisation of a person as a Lego® figure. The main points however can be summarised under the following two headings:
1) AVAILABILITY OF PARTS: Firstly your figures are limited to what parts you can use. These parts are limited based upon a) what you have available, b) what Lego® parts actually exist and c) what your capabilities are for producing or printing new parts .
2) VISUALISATION: Capturing someone as a Lego® figure involves perhaps most importantly the ability to see that person as a Lego® figure. This is where artistic integrity becomes relevant. The figure not only has to be genuinely representative of a person, it also has to look good. Developing a range of creative skills  is essential in this respect.

Ballerinaring

AVAILABILITY OF PARTS:
Part of the key to creating successful figures here at Brick Yourself is having a large amount of parts to draw upon. The range of Lego® mini-figure parts has expanded to include a mind-boggling array of interesting pieces. Lego® themselves have been extremely creative in their production of mini-figure body parts and accessories and any good design should incorporate as many design possibilities as it can.
Apart from the gradual expansion of mini-figure related parts in their Lego® sets, the Lego® group released the first of a series of mini-figures which is now up to its 16th series as of March 2016. These mini-figure series’ have produced a treasure trove of hitherto unimagined variety of quality parts that represent almost as many interests and hobbies as there are stars in the sky.
The items are so specific that you can easily represent one interest someone has in one specific part and a corresponding interest with another. It is now not so much a question of whether you’re able to represent someone in Lego®, but rather how would you represent someone in Lego®.
For example you might want to design someone who has a love of gardening and tennis. For accessories you could use a gardening shovel and flowers, and they could be wearing a tennis outfit. In contrast you could dress them in gardening overalls and give them a tennis racket as an accessory.  Other possibilities include dressing them in a style of clothing they might be particularly fond of and giving them one tennis and one gardening accessory.

Soccor-Boy

This is a really exciting time for anyone interested in mini-figure customisation and design.
Of course there is a tremendous amount of research involved in learning what’s currently available, and in staying on top of the latest releases so that your ability to design figures remains as limitless as possible. A selection of which heads are currently available for example can be found @: http://www.toywiz.com/legoyellowhead.html.
And of course obtaining and storing the pieces is the last crucial step in having the parts available. Organisation is the key to this all important last phase. Parts need to be precisely organised and categorised both digitally and in actuality so that a strict inventory can be maintained and quantities can be maintained.

Smiling-Surfer

Sourcing parts is probably the most challenging part of all of this. Lego® itself has relatively few parts individually available and so parts need to be sourced from individual sellers online or sourced from individual sets. As it’s economically unfeasible to buy single parts from individuals, sellers need to be identified and then multiple parts can be purchased to offset exorbitant shipping prices.
One-of-a-Kind
Parts can of course can be made and/or printed to add extra customisability to your figures. Many sites devote themselves entirely to the manufacturing of custom made parts such as Brick Forge www.brickforge.com which specialises in custom Lego weapons and armour. 3D printing has opened the opportunities for this industry. Not only is any piece imaginable now available but new thoughts and ideas are developing that are if not completely brilliant are at least interesting and innovative such as Etsy which 3D print realistic heads for Lego® mini-figures: https://www.etsy.com/listing/254218278/custom-make-your-own-head-for-lego?ref=listing-shop-header-2.

Researcher

High quality printing options are also available for Lego® parts utilising a broad range of processes including stickers, water slide decals. Brick Yourself specializes in printing parts and are able to print onto every  mini-figure part including arms, legs, torsos and faces.
With access to a wide enough variation of actual Lego® parts therefore the possibilities for creating mini-figures according to imaginable is vast if not limited. When custom part designing and detailing are also optional, the design potential becomes infinitely limitless.
Brickman Dan is the founder of Brick Yourself and publishes regular articles on how LEGO® Art & Design, as well as LEGO® Investment.

Pregnant-Sue


Pirate-Steve


Mermaid-Pussy

In Part 3: How to visualise and create what someone will look like in Lego®..  
Rare Insights into How to Design Custom Minifigs:
PART 3: VISUALISATION & PERSONALITY:
In this final part of our study we explore the key elements (no pun intended) involved in designing custom LEGO® figures: the concepts of visualisation and personality. In so doing, the investigation will border on topics of art, philosophy, metaphysics and identity. 

Barman-Dave-Logo-Words


The key to creating a unique mini-figure lies in the ability to create a personality for the figure that mirrors the personality of the person of whom the figure is being created. People can be funny, outgoing, happy, morose, young, ambitious, studious, successful, musical, creative and sporty to begin to list a few characteristics. They can be passionate about  things like cooking, art, writing, theatre, computer games, football and music to name a few and their hobbies can be as diverse as star-gazing, windsurfing and stamp collecting and everything in between.

Captain-Americaball

Hobbies, interests, passions and personality traits are all integral aspects of a person that must be captured and combined if you are to have any hope of incorporating various aspects of a particular human being into a  LEGO® figure. The process is artistically challenging, and creatively problematic and involves more than anything, a deep understanding and knowledge of the person being ‘bricked’.
It is precisely this thought and attention that goes into making these figures such tremendous gifts. When you find the right gift for someone it is something that captures their likes and interests, something that inherently captures their personality. It is something they like and will often use, play with or display depending on what would be most beneficial for the person receiving the gift. For example a really thoughtful gift for your mum, might be something in which she is currently interested (my mum likes gardening and reading for example), so I might get her a book on gardening that she could use and learn from. Or I might get her something that reminds her of me such as a photo in a frame that she can display. In any event I’m getting her something that is close to her heart and that will be useful in some sense.

Violinist

It will be the same for a  LEGO® figure. The figure will encapsulate certain attributes of a person and these attributes give the figure its personality. For an example we can look at Chris’ figure.
The Description: Chris is in his late twenties. He is a bit cheeky and is particularly good with computers. He also likes rapping, and being creative and is someone who aspires towards career and financial success. In terms of Lego he is a big fan and was particularly fond of the M-Tron space sets that were around when he was a kid.
The Figure: I have done Chris’ figure in a way that encapsulates all his major attributes. He has a baseball cap on sideways to represent his rapping interests and a cheeky smile to represent that side of his personality. He wears the M-Tron Lego torso that reminds him fondly of Lego when he was a child and he is accessorised with a computer screen and a gold bar. The gold bar represents success but it could also be seen as a golden keyboard implying that he will be successful both financially and in his career because of his skill with computers.
Rapentrepeneur
And so Chris’ figure captures Chris’ personality in ways that are creative, artistic and imaginative, while at the same time defining aspects of his character that are positive and uplifting. Now of course the figure will never capture all the aspects of Chris’ personality. His interest in rap could be better captured by a microphone and possibly a boom-box rather than just a sideways baseball cap, but of course then there wouldn’t be the possibility of him holding other items.
If you’ve read through this (and possibly the two preceding articles) then you deserve to be let in on a few custom LEGO® minifigure design secrets. The real key to designing someone in an artistic way,  LEGO® or otherwise, is to capture the feel for the person. To encompass key characteristics that as a whole, paint a composite picture that allows them to be more readily identifiable by virtue of those characteristics.

Mermaid-Pussy

This can be easier through other artistic mediums because of what becomes possible via the each possible artistic medium. For example a sculpture like Michelangelo's David allowed Michelangelo to capture aspects of David (at least how he saw him) in exquisite detail because of the scale of 1:1 that he was working with as well as the sculpting properties and potential of the marble. Of course a work of art like that is only possible under the hands of a master, but it is still possible in a way that creating a  LEGO® figure isn’t.
Similarly, Da Vinci’s Annunciation is a magnificent work of art, the clothing the people are wearing looks like it is about to quite literally float off the page, however in the hands of a master, the capacity for oil paints to capture details of real life is almost limitless. The same is not true of  LEGO®. Because the pieces you’re working with are limited both in terms of what’s available (see the previous article on availability of parts) and what is physically possible (because for example they can only be holding so many things) it becomes much more challenging in some ways to define the person as a  LEGO® figure.

Pregnant-Sue

Digital figures offer new possibilities, but of course if you want to give a physical gift, then you are inexorably drawn back to the limitations of a physical figure.
What Da Vinci and Michelangelo and other great artists did was capture the feel of something, often through the details. The same is true for any  LEGO® artist, whether they’re working to design figures, large scale LEGO® works of art or anything else that involves that fantastic brick. Good artists capture a feel for something and then are able to reproduce this according to their artistic medium. This obviously involves recreating physical attributes, but capturing the feel of something artistically is more than this. It is the blending of many physical qualities which culminate in a personality that is greater than the sum of its parts.
How you do this with  LEGO® figures involves revealing a second secret: designing LEGO® figures of people, or at least doing it well, is a metaphysical exercise. It is quite philosophical in fact and this is simply awesome because here you’re dealing with recreating something from an aesthetic, a cerebral and an emotive perspective all at the same time and in many ways these three features are the absolute keys to creating anything truly artistic, anything that honestly attempts to recreate and incorporate aspects of our reality.
Hipster-Wolverine
When designing a  LEGO® figure for someone, the process becomes a collaborative one, between the designer and the designee. It becomes a process of identification and definition that seeks to identify someone in a real way and this involves figuring out what it is that essentially defines a person. Of course as previously discussed,  LEGO® is a very limiting medium and so we’re not aiming for any grand exposition of the human condition, however we are looking for a fundamental way of describing certain identities using limited resources. In this sense, questions of identity and being become very relevant to the ultimate question (in this instance) of what a person may look like in LEGO®.
For someone who has a love of art and philosophy such as myself, this process becomes very exciting and pregnant with possibility. Transcendental worlds begin to combine in an exploration of the self and this is essentially what I believe art should be.  This is where the visualisation process resides, where true imagination becomes necessary. It is where seeing something like the crucial aspects of someone’s personality in your mind’s eye then get translated into something substantial and concrete and the artistic process comes full circle.

Soccor-Boy

Now of course the way you represent someone, even as a  LEGO® figure can be as diverse as people’s personalities are. However, given the fun nature of  LEGO®, it lends itself to capturing the more innocent and positive aspects of someone’s personality and this is hardly a bad thing. You could of course (and LEGO® figures have) represented people as being angry and scary and sad, but this generally doesn’t capture a person’s essential characteristics, let alone those you would want to be defined by. For those reasons I’m more than happy to stick to positive or at the very least quirky and eccentric characteristics when it comes to designing figures, though the possibilities are in actuality far more broad than this.
Once the tough questions have been asked and (hopefully) answered the next step in the creative process can be to give the characters names (funny, quirky or otherwise). Naming the  LEGO® caricatures is certainly not necessary and in some ways it can be inhibitive of a broader and freer process of definition, but it can help to cement the personality you are seeking to create and even redefine it in some ways.
Morose Teenager with Guitar Final

Contemporary Dance



Plastic Surgeon


Adventure-Capitalist


Barman-Dave-Logo-Words


Occ Health & Safety Jedi


I’ve added some examples of quirky Brick Yourself characters here at the end to provide some illustrations of how creative you can get by simply adding some  LEGO® parts together. This process can be taken even further by writing a poem or a story for each individual figure, thereby developing and adding to their personalities and the character of another possible LEGO® figure world, but this is a topic for another article.
It has been long held that working with  LEGO® involves an artistic process. What I hope I have shown to some degree is that working with LEGO® figures in particular involves so much more. The process of visualising someone as a LEGO® figure involves drawing from broader artistic and philosophical principles which add to our ability to define each other and the world, and in this sense, this is entirely what the process of art should be about.     
Brickman Dan is the founder of Brick Yourself and publishes regular articles on how LEGO® Art & Design, as well as LEGO® Investment.

Tuesday, 15 March 2016

Full Sized LEGO® Tardis at This Year's Royal Easter Show

In aid of promoting not only LEGO® but also Doctor Who, a full sized LEGO® version of the Tardis will feature at this year's Sydney Royal Easter Show. Following on from the successful release of the LEGO® Tardis this year by the LEGO® group, Doctor Who and LEGO® fans are being further spoiled by the Easter show addition.
Courtesy Birmingham Mail
The Tardis will be located outside the Showbag Pavilion on Riverina Avenue. Its main purpose, apart from pandering to the Doctor Who army is to promote the release of the first ever Doctor Who Royal Easter Show Showbag. The bag will contain a veritable bevy of Doctor Who merchandise including a Tardis design back pack, tin case, beanie hat, notebook and lanyard, and a Doctor Who tote bag.
Courtesy of Lego
The LEGO® replica was featured last year at the Doctor Who festival and was not designed specially for the event. The show opens tomorrow on the 17th March and runs till the 30th.
Brickman Dan is the founder of Brick Yourself and publishes regular articles on how LEGO® Art & Design, as well as LEGO® Investment.

Friday, 11 March 2016


Images courtesy of Burlough

This custom Lego work of art was designed by burlog and is inspired by Blizzard's epic series Warcraft. The Gates of Ogrimmar are the entrance to the Stone Valley City  of Ogrimmar, city of the goblins. The barbican itself is framed by robust, imposing walls and imperious towers and the whole design is magnificent to behold.

Claw Coast

The walls themselves could be stone or steel with iron banded wall braces on either side of the gate, adding to the imposing feel of the structure. The towers are obviously wooden and made to look like massive tree trunks laced together.
The scene behind is idyllic with flowing water and mountainous landscape. There is a cave built into the wall and the dark mountain on the side of the wall looks extremely organic and are quite aesthetically pleasing, though the SNOT (Studs not on top) design technique is primarily responsible for its rugged character.

Claw Coast

The whole set is flooded with marvelous detail, and burlog himself says,
"In the last year I was a rather inactive builder, though in my mind I planned my new diorama. The wall with the guard towers were inspired by the gates of Orgrimmar in WoW, but the other elements are not connected to the game (maybe the windmill a little bit...). Unfortunately I was in a rush at the end, but at least I see a lot of improvement possibilities!"

Claw Coast

This is a wonderful piece of Lego work that pays tribute to the relatively recent genre of computer gaming custom LEGO(R).
Brickman Dan
Brickman Dan is the founder of Brick Yourself and publishes regular articles on how LEGO® Art & Design, as well as LEGO® Investment.

Wednesday, 9 March 2016

Introducing the New Lego News Show! Dan Brickman vs Brickman Dan

The LEGO(R) group has launched its own news program recently which seemed quite exciting at first. I was envisaging coverage of the latest Lego articles and news stories by Lego hosts, however the show turned out to be more of a farcical, humorous escapade than anything resembling real news.
The Lego News Show
Courtesy of Lego
This was a bit of a disappointment as I think that Lego hosted coverage of Lego events would be really cool, but this was not the case. Given that they have gone down the path of least resistance (comedy as opposed to real news) it would have at least been entertaining if they'd presented it in an offbeat, quirky way like some other shows I could mention, but again unfortunately it was dumbed down and aimed at the lowest common denominator.
Courtesy of Muppet Wikia
In what is a bit of a strange coincidence, the show's host was called Dan Brickman, as opposed to Brickman Dan, who is the author of this blog, but this is not the first time Brickman Dan has been one step ahead of the LEGO group in their projects having released Indiana Jones, some Star Wars sets and an entire Lord of the Rings range before the LEGO group has. I will aim to publish an article on these serendipitous occurrences another time. In my own personal opinion I also think Brickman Dan is much better looking than Dan Brickman but I might be biased.
Dan-Brickman
Courtesy of Lego - Dan Brickman
Brickman Dan
Click here to see the first ever episode of the show, but for now, you're probably best staying on Brick Yourself's website for all the latest actual Lego news.
Brickman Dan
Brickman Dan is the founder of Brick Yourself and publishes regular articles on how LEGO® Art & Design, as well as LEGO® Investment.