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Featured Replies

Sounds pretty interesting. Very unique from lots of different LEGO websites. 
The author has several good ideas about what to do with bricks! See pictures of what he came up with so far:

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I looked around the website and it looks very interesting/unique. It really does stand out from the thousands of other LEGO blogs.

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Yeah thanks TOK, that was a good read.

 

Some of those parts from the early days are pretty crazy.

  • Author

Yeah thanks TOK, that was a good read.

Some of those parts from the early days are pretty crazy.

:thankyou: I still have many of those old windows and oddball doors from the early Town & Castle sets and recall how seldom they were used in any of my builds back then due to their limited usage other than being just what they were. Granted they fit the bill nicely at the time but for the most part trying to make use of them was a real pain.

All the piece types we have today are very versatile even the more unique ones. Look at how we construct doors today. You have a frame with notches allowing a universal door part to either open to the left or right towards the inside or outside. Now take that same frame and use some differently colored window panels. Check out all the layouts one can make with the tiny window frame part giving a house some character.

I just think it's amazing how far the designs for pieces, which then correlates to the set builds, has progressed over the course of many years. Each part has a specific initial use yet can do so much more than only that.

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  • Author

A new article covering (almost) every single possible color LEGO has created and used (or not) over the decades in this very thorough color chart reference study. Sections of primary interest are the detailed timelines for certain colors and also detailed dissections for changes over time so slight who would have noticed without direct comparisons. There is even a little bit revolving around the near bankruptcy the company faced forcing them to shape up by condensing the hues and parts used almost right down the middle. It's a short read actually but the information is indispensable.

Color Timeline
Color Timeline by Brick Colorstream

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On ‎8‎/‎30‎/‎2015 at 8:56 PM, TheOrcKing said:

Here is a fresh article covering a uniquely artistic new part some are dubbing 'the curlicue'.

what set(s) are these from?

  • 2 weeks later...

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