Wednesday, October 20, 2010

MosaicBricks Interviews Pattern Expert eilonwy77 / Katie Walker

Name of Model: Mosaic Bricks Interview! interview & mosaic
Mosaics created by: eilonwy77 (Katie Walker)
Interview conducted by: MosaicBricks
Found at: http://mosaicbricks.blogspot.com/2010/10/interview-katie-walker-eilonwy77_14.html & http://www.flickr.com/photos/eilonwy77/5086690606/
Details: For months now, Katie Walker has been posting a string of spectacular and unusual mosaics on flickr. Her techniques range from fanatically precise LEGO geometry with headlight bricks to impossibly patient trial-and-error with cheese slopes. She has inspired, humbled, and scared many a LEGO builder. Recently, she was interviewed for the MosaicBricks blog - to mark the occasion, she built the two mosaics of the blog's name shown here (by the way, if anyone does something like that for us, we'd totally change our header to use it too!)

I actually try to hold back from posting too much of Katie's material because most of it isn't really what most of us would consider "models". Everything is a work-in-progress, a study, or a proof-of-concept. Some of it gets worked into a larger creation later, but most of it is quickly taken apart after the photos are taken (the photographs serve as enough documentation to rebuild the designs later if they are needed). It is, though, always worth a look through her flickr photostream to see what she's been up to. As I said before, her work inspires (with clever techniques), humbles (with the fact she's using a small collection and a very small variety of pieces), and scares (with the amount of time that goes into some of the more ornate small designs). I've featured some of her studies before, but there's way more where that came from. Due to the popularity of her few finished models, I've actually backed away from featuring those here as well (out of respect for the readers who also follow other LEGO blogs, I try to keep repetition to a minimum) - but you should absolutely take a look at the courtyard and the atrium that she built for an as yet unbuilt queen's palace.

Of course, the most intimidating part is realizing that this "beginner" already knows more about how you can fit LEGO pieces together than most experienced hobbyists will ever figure out. It's a rare person who is willing to work with DUPLO and Technic alongside regular LEGO pieces, never mind actually willing to figure out these geometrical quirks. Which is why we should all pay attention here - the techniques you'll pick up will save time later and make you a better builder.

4 comments:

Katie said...

Well then... do you have a favorite color? ;-)

Dan said...

I'm partial to blue, but I don't want to make the other colors feel left out...

Katie said...

I'd say flattery would get you anything you wanted, but first off: I have no blue. Not in the right pieces! (Though I'm not completely devoid of medium blue...) Secondly, do you know how many letters there are in "Fascinating LEGO model of the day?" ;-) (big grins)

Dan said...

Hmm. I hadn't realized how pricy blue cheese is in quantity...

I figured that the odds were low - which makes the idea of it that much more flattering. I'd be fine with a shortened version too - I've cut off the word "Fascinating" in a few places before, and in the URL it's abbreviated to LMOTD.