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LEGO movie posters & stained glass windows

One of my favorite LEGO customizers, EclipseGRAFX, recently released some really nice printed designs on standard LEGO 4×6 clear windowpanes. The LEGO Movie Poster Series includes small versions of LEGO movie posters for popular films, and the LEGO Stained Glass Series features beautiful stained glass windowpanes. I ordered a few of them, and I thought to show you how they look like. 🙂

LEGO MOVIE POSTER SERIES BY ECLIPSEGRAFX: Each of the movie posters are printed on standard LEGO 4×6 clear windowpanes, and come with a standard 1x4x6 black LEGO window-frame. The movie posters are printed on the backside of the windowpanes, so they look like they are behind glass. From the back, they are plain white. They would work perfectly with the #10232 LEGO Creator Palace Cinema as alternate movie posters, and of course could also be used in other settings.

Many of the LEGO Movie Poster Series designs are basically miniature versions of LEGO-ized movie posters, and include all the Star Wars episodes, various Marvel and DC superhero films, The LEGO Movie, The LEGO Ninjago Movie, etc. EclipseGRAFX mostly sells these designs at various LEGO conventions, and they occasionally add them to their online store inventory as well.

EclipseGRAFX also LEGO-izes movie posters themselves, which currently include Terminator 2, The Silence of the Lambs, and Rambo II, with more posters to come. These designs are regularly available at the EclipseGRAFX online store, and you can also get them at LEGO conventions.

LEGO STAINED GLASS SERIES BY ECLIPSEGRAFX: The LEGO Stained Glass Series is something new that EclipseGRAFX just started experimenting with. These designs are also printed on the backside of standard LEGO 4×6 clear windowpanes, but they are left translucent to create a beautiful stained glass effect. So far, there is only one design available in this series, featuring Princes Zelda and Link from The Legend of Zelda. More stained glass patterns are in the works.

I got four designs in my recent order from the EclipseGRAFX online store; The LEGO Movie poster, The LEGO Ninjago Movie poster, the LEGO Brickumentary movie poster, and The Legend of Zelda stained glass window. The quality of the print is exceptional on all of them, with vibrant colors and crisp lines (you can read even the tiniest words on the posters!). I especially like the stained glass window, which is just so beautiful with light shining through! (See picture below.)

As I mentioned earlier, each of the windowpanes comes with a standard LEGO 1x4x6 black window-frame, and they are packed in hard plastic packaging with a printed card. Everything about these products reflects the high quality EclipseGRAFX is well known for in the LEGO fan community. If you want to give them a try, visit EclipseGRAFX’s online store at EclipseBricks.com, or check for their booth at your favorite LEGO convention, as they attend many of them.

What do you think? How do you like these LEGO posters and stained glass windows? Do you have any of them already? Or are you planning to get some? What other posters and stained glass window patterns would you like to see them make? Feel free to share your thoughts, ideas and own review in the comment section below! 😉

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i-Brix LEGO lights without wires are back!

You might remember i-Brix from a couple of years ago (see: i-Brix – LEGO Lights Without Batteries & Wires). Many LEGO fans supported the project at that time and really wanted it to succeed, but the fundraising goal to launch the product was just too high, and there were also some kinks to work out in terms of safety regulations, and the distance the lights could work. Since then, Dustin Culton, the inventor behind i-Brix, continued working on and improving i-Brix, and now the project is back on KickStarter with a substantially lower fundraising goal that is already half-way reached. And there is still more than a month to go! 🙂

i-Brix is the first and only patent-pending wirelessly powered lighting system designed to be used with LEGO building components. It requires no batteries or wires in the bricks, giving you full freedom to build. The technology is similar to wireless cell phone charging, however it does not require direct contact with the charging surface. Also, the system is transmitting power real-time and therefore doesn’t actually charge the bricks.

i-Brix has two components; the 10×10 inch Power Plate, and the i-Brix 1×1 transparent bricks with a LED light and receiver. The Power Plate can be placed underneath regular LEGO baseplates, and the 1×1 bricks are powered wirelessly from the Power Plate when positioned up to 8 inches above it. This is the first and only wirelessly powered system to feature this technology and also work at a distance!

The fact that the i-Brix can be lit up without wires is amazing in itself. For example, you can light up your LEGO city, space station, or enchanted forest simply by placing the Power Plate under the baseplates, and adding the i-Brix transparent bricks wherever you want inside and outside the buildings, without having to route and hide wires. And there is another, even greater advantage; you can use the i-Brix bricks to light up moving vehicles! One of the major problems with wired systems has always been that they could not be used for small vehicles, because the battery-box had to be somehow hidden inside the vehicle for it to still remain mobile. With i-Brix you don’t have to do that. As long as the vehicle is placed on or hovers over the Power Plate, the lights will work!

Dustin shares the following about the project: “As a kid, I would string incandescent Christmas light strands around my LEGO sets. (Hey, you work with what you can!) This was obviously not ideal, but plain clumsy, messy and not too attractive. As I grew into my AFOL (Adult Fan of LEGO) role, I started looking at the ability to add lighting in a better way – it shouldn’t require a bunch of wires, drilling, battery enclosures, etc. You should be able to add lights to your buildings without all of these potential nuisances. My goal was to make lights for bricks that could fit into one of the smallest enclosures possible, so that you could have the most flexibility when adding them to a model.”

Just like many other LEGO fans, I was very excited about this project a couple of years ago, and it was disappointing that it didn’t reach its fundraising goal at that time. It’s great to see that Dustin didn’t give up, but continued to refine and improve the product, and brought it back with even better features and a much lower fundraising goal. That’s serious dedication! On the i-Brix website Dustin says: “One thing that we want our fans and followers to know is that unlike many other KickStarter campaigns, our product has been through several review stages, including multiple design and engineering refinements. We have even completed an FCC prescan to meet safety regulations (which it passed). We chose to do these tests before the KickStarter campaign, not after we collect funds from our supporters. We are taking the time and steps to make sure we introduce the best possible product available, which includes proper testing and thorough research.”

The KickStarter funding will be used for the following: 1.) Wrapping up any loose ends with the first and only patent-pending wirelessly powered lighting system available 2.) Mold fabrication for the i-Brix bricks that will hold the LED core, as well as actual brick manufacturing 3.) Transmitter and receiver production and assembly 4.) Finalization of engineering work and final product testing 5.) PCB production that holds the electronic components, including the LEDs 6.) Packaging for each i-Brix product 7.) FCC certification – i-Brix already passed an FCC prescan to ensure FCC compliance 8.) Fulfilling all backers of the KickStarter campaign!

If you would like to learn more about how i-Brix works, see a demonstration video, and pledge your support, visit the i-Brix.com, or go directly to the i-Brix KickStarter campaign page.

So what do you think? How do you like the concept of wireless lighting for LEGO? Would you be interested to get them if and when they become available? Are you planning to support the project or have you already done so? Feel free to share and discuss in the comment section below! 😉

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