Halloween BAM Figures Spotted in the Wild.

Here we are on the eve of the final quarter of the year and our local LEGO Certified Store has already put the new Build-a-Minifigure (BAM) elements in the station, and loaded up some new figures into easy to carry 3-packs. With closing time mere minutes away, I didn’t have the time to see if there were any other new figures to be found. You may or may not find any when you next visit your local LEGO Branded store.

There is a distinctive Halloween flavour in the air with some of these figures, even though there are still more than 2 months to that time of the year. Lets take a closer look (Special thanks to Tash for her work on this week’s cardboard cut out backdrop).

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40562 Creator 3 in 1: Mystic Witch: Gift With Purchase 14-31st October

It’s a funny time of the year: the Christmas/Holiday season sets have been announced, but the Gifts with Purchase are a bit unpredictable until we enter November: We went with early October purchases to secure the Gift with Purchase Ideas Set ‘Ray the Castaway’ and then out of nowhere… This Happens.

The 40562 Mystic Witch set is a Creator 3-in-1 set that will be available as a gift with purchase in the second half of October 2022 (there might even be a day or two of overlap with double GWP Points if you are really clever). In Australia, the purchase threshold is $165 AUD (or $USD100/€100/£100 ROTW): Perfect if you are looking at 10308 – The Holiday Main Street in time for the holidays- or another copy of 10497 Galaxy Explorer because it is an awesome set!

I was fortunate to be sent a copy to look at: will it be enough to trigger purchases during the latter half of October, before the Christmas GWPs start to appear, and indeed before Black Friday in November? Let’s take a look!

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A Simple Holiday Project (ion)

Halloween is greeted with varying enthusiasm by Australians. From an awesome opportunity to dress up and beg neighbours for lollies, through to downright detestation of Imported Celtic/American rituals and celebrations.

I am probably somewhere in between.

However, many of my neighbours appear to be a little more enthusiastic, with the houses and gardens being decorated with spiderwebs plastic pumpkins and skeletons for some time in the weeks running up to October 31st.

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Sand Green September I: What I learned from 10228 Monster Fighters Haunted House.

FullSizeRender 83Five years ago, I was on holiday with my family in the UK.  This was years before any talk of LEGO® Certified stores or LEGO Land Discovery Centres opening up in Australia.  And Australian prices for large LEGO sets were quite outrageous, when compared with those in Europe. At least it felt that way.  Anyway, in early September 2012, the LEGO Monster Fighters Haunted House 10228 first went on sale.  A couple of weeks later we made it to the LEGO Brand Retail Store in Cardiff.  We were in Cardiff for various reasons. Many of these reasons may have involved members of our family being fans of Doctor Who. I was probably (and still am) one of them. But this is irrelevant for today’s story.

On the shelves, we found the Haunted house: it evoked so many great memories: the Addams Family, the Munsters – both after school and Saturday morning television staples as I grew up, as well as Boris Karloff and Bela Lugosi movies.  A quick check of the exchange rate made me feel that it was an offer too good to refuse, so we bought it.  Unfortunately, the box did not survive the trip home in our luggage, and the numbered bags have been sitting in a yellow and red LEGO Store bag , in a drawer, in our LEGO room. And then, for five years, nothing happened.  Until this week.

I was prompted to think about this set because a couple of new sets released recently had also entered by possession: The Old Fishing Store (21310) and Lloyd’s Green Mech, from the LEGO Ninjago Movie. Both of these sets have a significant proportion of sand green elements. (Is it wrong to start obsessing over a new colour, so recently after I looked at Spring Yellowish Green? I hope not.) In researching the haunted house, I discover the designer video.  And then things started to reach a nexus: The LEGO designer (as opposed to the fan creator) of the Old Fishing Store is Adam Grabowski, who also had a hand in designing many of the Monster Fighter sets. In particular, however, he designed the Haunted house, with the first sketches existing back in 2008-2009 or so.

At this point, I am yet to build The Old Fishing Store, so I thought I would start with the Haunted House.  Like the Fishing Store, it also has just over 2000 pieces, is also an old building, and also features a significant amount of sand green. As I put it together, I found myself thinking about the next building I am planning to design.  The exact details of that build are not important right now.  However, I found myself noticing the features of this set that made it look like a nifty, dilapidated building which, while conforming to the requirements for using the building techniques approved for the use in sets, give us handy design cues for our own such buildings.

What the Haunted House 10228 Taught Me About Building an Old House:

Foundations – regardless of the material used for building, almost always the bottom layers are a different colour and/or material. Here we have a few layers of light stone grey, before we start layering up with the sand green walls. i am imagining the sand green being more likely to represent weatherboard, or some form of render over boards. I have difficulty reconciling this with the possible use of stone for the foundations.  To enhance the old, ruined look, and avoid the great flat wall syndrome, three gestures of light stop grey are used: flat bricks, the palisade brick, and the 1×2 profile brick, with the ‘brick profile’ exposed.  Occasionally a 1×1 cylinder brick is used next to the palisade tor a 1×3 effect. this combination of ‘stone bricks’ works quite well for the chimney as well.  While is may not have the same level ramshackle construction as some of the more detailed MOCs  by castle builders such as Dermal Cardem, it still conveys the same effect, with a parts count that we can deal with.  And our fingers won’t start to bleed as we continue to build it!IMG_7643

Incorporate the flight of stairs into the wall: The wall adjacent to the stairs starts off two studs thick.  As we add steps to the staircase, it reverts to one stud thick.  The result is a flight of stairs that is steady, and robust, incorporated as a firm part of the building.IMG_7648

Incorporate the chimney build into the interior wall: this happens in real life: the structure of the chimney will run up the internal wall of a house. By using 2×2 corner bricks in the build, crossing from the internal wall to the external stone chimney, the chimney is ‘part of the house’ not just loosely attached to the out side.

Nothing will break or wear out exactly the same way:

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Every main window , down stairs and on the first floor is wearing out in a different way to every other: the wooden plank boring the window up may be light reddish brown, and printed as a board, or a dark brown plain tile.  The plank may go up or down, over the top or bottom window pane. There may or may not be shutter as well.  The window may have a curtain sticker on the upper pane, or a cobweb stuck onto the lower pane of glass.  This variety is as likely in real life as it is in LEGO sets.

Chipped plaster/render reveals the boards underneath. The profile brick (design ID 98283) has a different profile design on each sides: the obvious one has the effect of a layers of brick laid offset on each other.  The other side is a simpler design, and it was only while building this set that I realised that it works very successfully to represent exposed boards on the external walls.  The use of the contrasting dark tan/brick yellow next to  the sand green bricks makes it look like a different material is underneath the render/ paint, and enhances the ruined old house effect significantly. I am disappointed in myself for taking this long to realise that the profile brick has a ‘plank side’ as well as the ‘brick side!’

The  ground floor – a scattering of tiles on the ground floor allows the building to feel as if the stone floor has been chipped or worn away over the years.  placing a few of the 1×1 tiles diagonally – off the grid as it were – greatly enhances the experience.IMG_7662

Windows are present on each wall of the house, but shelves or other furniture inside the house prevent windows being placed evenly, all the way around.  Again, the lack of symmetry is useful to enhance the realism of the house design.

The use of the ‘stick with 3.2mm holder’ – element 4289538 – all the way around the roof, clipping onto the bars,  allows for uneven spacing, as well as uneven angles, signs of wear on the building. In real life however, I think we should still try to place them evenly, as they will not slide away in real life.

The steps to the front door are uneven, thanks to the use of cheese slopes, and the boards on the porch have different textures: plates and tiles used together, in a staggered fashion.IMG_7664

Also near the porch is the vegetation: dark tan shrubs suggests that they haven’t been kept living as vibrantly as they might have. And some magic seems to have stopped the house from being overrun by ivy.IMG_7666

 

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Zombie heads on the verandah: nothing says ‘old and decaying’ quite like a zombie head.  I am afraid to consider just how these heads came to be here.  Are they still ‘functioning’ as it were – serving as an alarm system by groaning overtime somebody approaches the from door?  Or are they just the mortal remains of previous…guests? and did the Zombie chef cook up the rest of them?

Great Big Iron Gates.  Nothing says ‘Old house’ quite like big, wrought iron gates.  The fact that these are a separate build to most of the house allows the house to be placed on a small hill, back from the fence, perhaps with a small family graveyard off to the side? I might incorporate the haunted house into a larger layout, with the house elevated, but having the fence crossing the front of the block…perhaps with a pond incorporating a swamp creature from the lagoon of an abnormal dark shade…IMG_7667

This house is designed as a fold open ‘playset’ type of house, rather than a ‘remove the roof and the top floor’ type of building, similar to the modular buildings.  One of the implications of this is that if it is displayed in a closed position, it becomes almost essential to consider lighting the inside of the building, so that the details inside the house can be viewed through the windows.

Fun Fact: while this set contains 56 sand green 1×6 bricks, the element number (4155053) is different to that used for the 61 sand green 1×6 brick in the recently released 31136 Minecraft- The Ocean Monument set (6177081). If you are looking at sourcing elements for this build for yourself, it is currently cheaper to source these parts through bricks and pieces on the LEGO website ($AUD0.43) compared to bricklink prices (starting at $AUD0.57 each). (september 2017).  The much rarer element 1x1x5 brick, with a solid stud (2453b), only appeared in this set.  Considering this, it is reasonably priced on Bricklink (~30-50c each), BUT not available in this colour at all. from LEGO.

Well, I will say that this is a fun build: the detailed furniture and decorations constructed separately to the rest of the house.  The design does not afford itself to a shared building experience,  because although there are 3 instruction books, the floors are not constructed separately, unlike the modular houses.   The minifigure selection is great, especially with the new glow in the dark ghosts, which are limited to some of the Monster fighter sets, the Scooby Doo Haunted Mansion, and recent Halloween offerings.

The design offers itself for installation of lighting, and it looks suitably forbidding. There is also a good collection of creepy critters: spider, snake and bat! I would have preferred the floors being able to be removed seperately, like the modulars, however the opening up feature allows the house to be used more as a playset.

I give it four out of five Arbitrary Praise Units.

What do you think of this set? Did you build it? What did you learn from it?

Come back in a few days when I will review another  set for Sand Green September.

Until then,

Play Well!

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Edit Oct 29 :I’m pretty sure I published this a month ago… but it vanished. Hopefully the text is mostly accurate, and not a draft…

 

 

Halloween and the horror of overseas travel (40203: Vampire and Bat).

IMG_2110.jpgThe Rambling Brick Family recently travelled over to Europe during the recent school hollidays, and along the way we visited the LEGO Store in Paris, located at the Forum des Halles.  Now, I find it to be a difficult challenge shopping for LEGO when travelling to Europe:  It becomes a delicate balance between retail prices, Dollar to Euro conversion, easy availability of the set and on flight luggage allowances.

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Sculptures are another great part of the LEGO Store experience.

In France, there was not a lot to gain in purchasing sets at a saving by buying it locally compared to at Australian prices back home, or indeed purchasing sets online.  The prices and exchange rate just about cancelled each other out that week.  So I looked to exclusivity.  What was on the shelves at a reasonable price, that I might not be able to pick up back home?  Would I want to pick it up through shop.lego.com?

There is something to be said for the experience of visiting a LEGO brand store.  We were there in mid September 2016, and virtually every conceivable set was on display: The Disney Castle and New Death Star ( the one only slightly different to the old one) had just appeared in the stores, and were part of the instore display. The Christmas train was being unwrapped and built at the counter. As was Big Ben and just about every other set that would make an Australian AFOL cry out and bemoan the absence of such a retail experience here.  Even the Technic Porsche was on display. Continue reading