Sunday, October 23, 2016

NOOOOO!!


NOOOOO!!

Originally shared by Geoffrey Snyder

Escher Legos

27 comments:

  1. Totally tempted to do this in one of the Lego CAD apps...

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  2. That picture makes my ocd hurt. 😕

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  3. Star Wars Rules There are applications where you can make "instructions" for Lego models. Useful when you don't have a ton of parts handy, or if you have a complicated build that photos can't easily capture.

    http://mlcad.lm-software.com/

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  4. Morio Murase so you make instructions in it?

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  5. Actually, the image isn't so misleading.

    Look at the top of each arrow in respect of the floating Lego piece, the rightmost arrow is directly below the rightmost circular connector, but the leftmost arrow is not below the leftmost connector. If the floating piece was 4 connector long, the leftmost arrow would be perfectly positioned. If anything, it looks like the floating piece is broken.

    My isometric drawing lessons from school are coming flooding back.

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  6. Star Wars Rules I can. What I usually do is put it on a projector so that a crowd of kids can follow along.

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  7. Stripes The Tiger might find this fun.

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  8. You should try to buy chinese "Leko" ! I was facing a desperate child trying to use the Leko with Lego.
    Esherian.

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  9. Looking at this image makes me literally nauseous. I just can't...

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  10. Peter Doughman​ along your line of thought here...
    The arrows appear to be representing the corners of the piece, where the outer (skinny in this case) edges and the long edge we can see of the floating piece come together.
    To be less stressful on our OCD eyes and gastrointestinal systems, each arrow would better serve us if it originated directly beneath the nib it represents and terminated directly atop the nib to which it should be attached to.

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Now I'm doubly intrigued!

Now I'm doubly intrigued!