LEGO Will’s reconstructions of some of the vehicles of Mad Max: Fury Road.
The Princess and the Gigahorse look great.
The simpler lines of the Interceptor don’t translate quite so impressively to LEGO.
More here.
LEGO Will’s reconstructions of some of the vehicles of Mad Max: Fury Road.
The Princess and the Gigahorse look great.
The simpler lines of the Interceptor don’t translate quite so impressively to LEGO.
More here.
Oh.
Mark Hoskins writes:
The Facebook page “I bet this brick can get more likes than the Labour Party” was only created 17 hours ago, but it is already nearly half way to achieving it’s goal. Only a matter of time to when we’re ruled by the brick instead of the planks we’ve already got.
I Bet This Brick Can Get More Likes Than The Labour Party (Facebook)
The bronze-infused stainless steel ‘Brick Ring’ by COVO (€36.74)
A thing you could easily get attached to.
Famous works of art recreated in glued-together blocky splendour by LEGO artist Nathan Sawaya – part of his Art Of The Brick exhibition at the Discovery Times Square New York Museum.
LEGO celebrates its 80th birthday with this animated short relating the history of the world’s favourite little brick.
It’s not funny, but it is true.
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1TqBSI8ZBzQ&feature=player_embedded&has_verified=1
So you put a brick in a washing machine. Very funny. Did you even stop for a second to think how the washing machine might have felt about that?
Thought not.