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Found 4 results

  1. So I built my expanded modular Pixar UP house, but the box it's going in has room for another building of 16x32 size. Instead of just making another building from scratch, I decided to transplant Edna Mode's fashion shop onto a modular standard base. You can see the results below. This model was partially inspired by the both buildings in set 10308 - Holiday Main Street from the Winter Village collection. I added a back to it, changed the color scheme around and fixed some areas. I also replaced the original toys with clothing items for sale to make it into a shop for fashion designer Edna Mode from the Incredibles film franchise. (Apparently she has branched off from superhero costumes into the regular fashion market.) The rear has a delivery entrance and a simple porch light on the first floor, while the second / third floors have the chimney flue. On the inside, the lower floor has the shop full of items for sale - from tiaras to top hats, pants to suits. Upstairs is Edna's workshop, complete with sewing machine and long folds of different-colored cloth. I also have a heater / cooker, and a bunch of drawers full of patterned cloth pieces and clothing designs. The vintage sewing machine was from free instructions seen on Rebrickable by user @Scarlet_Patronus. (The lower floor's display cases were also based on items from this talented builder.) The third floor contains Edna's office complete with vault filled with gold, a desk with two chairs, some green kryptonite in a lead-glass case, (a gift from Batman) a old-fashioned TV on a bunch of cabinets, and a Superhero phone on a printed wall piece. This fabulous 1951 Hudson Hornet was originally a @hachiroku design of a Hudson Hornet that I modified quite a bit to be Edna Mode's car. The reason for this specific design is I was struggling to come up with a good 8-wide 1950's / 60's car design for her for use with the tailor shop. Then I remembered I had this design of a blue Hudson Hornet, (extremely similar to the one in CARS) and it just clicked. The car fit the era nicely, and it was high-end enough for Mode to drive without it seeming too odd. You can find the original builder's version here. The rear of the vehicle. The roof is removable and can seat a single mini-figure. EDIT 5/17/23: third floor finished, and all-new pictures added! Thoughts?
  2. Imagine: you're busy building on a new project, and you're almost finished.... then someone with the same idea goes all over the internet with his building. That's not funny! (sh*t happens ) It didn't hold me back of completing my version of: The Chanel Boutique in Amsterdam! It's located in the P.C. Hooftstraat: the well known street of only expensive shops. My version is very accurate: the size of the windows, the amount of windows and the height are all precise. The most extraordinary thing about this building is that it is made completely out of glass: the bricks, the doors, window sills, window frames and even the doorhandles... erverything is crystal clear glass! That explains the official name of this building: The Crystal Houses designed by Dutch architect office MVRDV. The glass bricks gradually go over in the famous Dutch bricks you see everywhere used in Amsterdam's canal houses. The glass bricks are an invention of the Technical University of Delft. I started building this last december... and no: I didn't count the trans-clear plates! Check: Flickr > BrickShelf > Creating the Crystal Houses (in Dutch)
  3. The flower boutique with black & white colour theme and blue curved tinted glass shopfront aim to attract young customers. A large green "F" sign at the side wall of the entrance is the logo of this flower boutique. On high level of the front door entrance, a planter with flowers was incorporated to give a touch that this is a flower shop let alone the cool shopfront design. There was a skylight on top of the shop to bring in more sunlight while with the tinted glass, the lighting level is controlled so as to keep the flowers in good conditions. Some species of flowers need to be kept at a cooler temperature and that's why at the inner corner of the shop, it was equipped with a flower fridge. Pots of flowers were displayed in different level with flower stand at the inner portion of the boutique. At the back of the cashier counter, high level shelves was installed as another display area for flower arrangement. Next to the cashier counter, the boutique owner is making flower arrangement for sale while the customer is selecting flowers. At the back lane, a low level fence was installed and a refuse bin was provided. The light & dark grey paver design was a coherent design with respect to my other MOC ice-cream parlour. The cool lamp pole design at the public pavement also match the cool design of my young line flower boutique. I have launched the set to LEGO IDEAS, Wish to have your support https://ideas.lego.com/projects/94528 Hope you enjoy my flower boutique.
  4. Cunctator

    MOC: Pharmacy and boutique

    Hi to everybody! I completed the interiors for one of my modular thanks to some friends set and I made some photos: At the ground floor a pharmacy and a boutique with the last alternative fashion directly from London! Second floor an R&D lab, you can see the graduate from S5 is really happy with his new job! Third floor: a design studio More photos will be available on brickshelf when moderated. Thanks for watching and hope you liked it! Bye Cunctator