Lego Artist Nathan Sawaya, one of the only six certified Lego professionals in the world, three in the U, will do a full-size scale Lego replica of yourself for $60,000. You just have to order it from Neiman Marcus, send some photographs, and Nathan will build your natural-size 8-bit version.
Nathan was recently interviewed by Jesus Diaz, from Gizmodo - The Gadget Guide. Below are excerpts from the interview.
Q: On average, how many pieces would it take to do one of these?
A: I don't keep track of how many pieces I use in a sculpture because it would get a bit tedious. But I am guessing around 15,000-25,000 individual bricks.
Q: As you are an sculptor, you work straight from reality, no digitizing process needed. How many photos do you need to do your work?
A: Ideally, I would like 16 photos: Eight full body photos from 360 degrees, and eight of the face and head from 360 degrees.
Q: Have you done one of these already? Any famous people?
A: I did myself, does that count? Seriously, the only other full body adult that I have done so far happens to be Stephen Colbert.
Nathan Sawaya is obsessed with LEGO® bricks. He fills his New York studio with more than 1.5 million of the interlocking toy building blocks, and he can sculpt anything out of them — a full-size Tyrannosaurus Rex skeleton or a 7-foot-long scale replica of the Brooklyn Bridge, for example. Given the skill and depth of his devotion to his art, it makes perfect sense to immortalize your own magnificent self with our 2008 His & Hers gifts.
Send in detailed photos and measurements, then Nathan gets to snapping and BOOM! One-of-a-kind, life-size sculptures of yourselves in LEGO bricks.
And by the way, if you don't have $60,000, then you should consider entering the Gizmodo "Go Miniman Go Lego" contest. The vintage shrink-wrapped Lego sets will get you a nice chunk of that money in eBay. But hurry up because the end of the month deadline is quickly approaching.
If you want to participate, check the contest rules here and send your video now. [Neiman Marcus]
(Article from Gizmodo - The Gadget Guide)
Wednesday, October 15, 2008
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