

62 (each ornament)Īdd a touch of fun and creativity to your holiday decorations with our personalized Lego ornament 3-pack featuring a direct printed photo. I added a floor, moved some walls and added some other elements to the interior. I lit the frames with a desk lamp and Ulanzi lamps.Actual size - 3.75 inch x 3.75 inch x. However, the most time-consuming was to expand the hospital, because in the original version it is very narrow, which made it difficult to frame the scene well. To make my photos I used very simple techniques. Therefore, throughout the process of creating this story, I felt light like an astronaut on the Moon! Retzka.photobricks This chipping of ideas, concepts, and different versions of history during discussions is probably my favorite part of every collaboration.

The photo session was only the culmination of much more enjoyable, in my opinion, concept work that we have done with Sandra, Arek, and Michał over the last several weeks. So it was a pure coincidence that my photo session took on even more realism! It’s also very difficult to remove it.Īpollo missions crews mentioned difficulties with getting rid of this dust adjacent to the surface of their suits. I didn’t manage to clean all the minifigs thoroughly, which I noticed, of course, after disassembling the entire Moon setting! So I did a little research and it turned out that the real lunar regolith is characterized by extremely strong adhesion and it sticks strongly to the surfaces. And it’s just as ubiquitous! Each fall of the minifigure in this dust meant that it became pretty dirty. This putty is very dusty and it actually resembles Moon dust. I used gypsum putty to make the lunar ground. I wanted the relative realism of my photos and to keep close to the mood of the photos from Apollo missions, so I used a single, harsh light.
Photobricks windows#
They were small and bright enough to make a base to pop and with the blue windows that was a good start. I used balloon LEDs – tiny battery LED lights that you put into the balloon to have a super party. Starting with the base camp, due to a lot of blue windows, I decided to light the base from inside. The moon terrain was made from decoration sands and mini rocks that you put in “forest in a jar” that are pretty not messy – big plus.
Photobricks how to#
Shooting space and moon climat was new for me and pretty out of my comfort zone and took a while to figure out how to light everything. On the one hand, every day there was new life, and on the other – unexpected surprises… by by Behind the scenes Legomiki Thanks to a visit from a friend, his hospital-cosmic adventure continued! by by course, hospital life went on with its usual rhythm. Rudy had to stay in the hospital for a few more days, but his loved ones didn’t let him get bored and think about his injuries. On that day he decided to launch his own space program but well…it seems that he miscalculated the risk of this operation. It was supposed to be a big day for Rudy who dreamed of becoming an astronaut. The young astro-dreamer, the hero of our story – Rudy, found out about it in a rather unpleasant way.īut at the end, a pleasant surprise awaited him! Youth, however, has its own laws, and the law of universal gravitation doesn’t belong to them. However, it’s worth taking the correction for gravity! This is a big step for humanity, but even bigger for a minifigure Neil ArmstudĪs is commonly known, dreams give you wings. The group spent some weeks pre-planning while their sets arrived, and more weeks shooting. We invited four polish photographers and to pick two sets from the LEGO store, with some constraints, and a couple ( and chose the 60330: Hospital while the other ( and the 60350: Lunar Research Base This time, though, due to unforseeable circumstances, we will have a storytelling around two sets! Here we are again with a collaborative storytelling! We’ve reached out to a group of talented LEGO photographers in our community to weave for us a visual narrative around one set.
