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Post by Alpha Hooligan on Oct 12, 2008 14:29:21 GMT
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Post by motorist on Oct 12, 2008 14:52:10 GMT
Man oh man, now THAT is pure art *sniff*
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Post by Alpha Hooligan on Oct 12, 2008 15:12:12 GMT
Art indeed, my friend, art indeed! AH
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Post by Patrick on Oct 13, 2008 22:13:08 GMT
That looks like one of those occasions when you've worked hard all day at building your Legoland - and after an argument with your brother he goes and smashes it up!
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Post by Alpha Hooligan on Oct 14, 2008 10:57:22 GMT
LOL! ;D My cousin broke one of my LEGO creations once, we ended up scuffling around the floor battering each other...although the most serious injuries resulted from rolling over hundreds of LEGO bricks...pretty sharp edges on those things. AH
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Post by motorist on Oct 14, 2008 12:52:59 GMT
Lego is very tough. I remember as a kid that whenever I picked a flea off one of the cats, I could crush it between two lego bricks. I also made 3-dimensional mazes, put the fleas in the middle and closed them up. They would starve to death trying to get out
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Post by Alpha Hooligan on Oct 14, 2008 13:00:11 GMT
Lego is very tough. I remember as a kid that whenever I picked a flea off one of the cats, I could crush it between two lego bricks. I also made 3-dimensional mazes, put the fleas in the middle and closed them up. They would starve to death trying to get out Two "k's" inbound over the next few hours...one for sheer creativity, one for services to feline-kind. AH
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Post by motorist on Oct 14, 2008 13:25:31 GMT
Lego is very tough. I remember as a kid that whenever I picked a flea off one of the cats, I could crush it between two lego bricks. I also made 3-dimensional mazes, put the fleas in the middle and closed them up. They would starve to death trying to get out Two "k's" inbound over the next few hours...one for sheer creativity, one for services to feline-kind. AH ;D ;D
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Post by everso on Oct 15, 2008 18:35:57 GMT
I once hoovered up my son's Lego because he refused to tidy it away after he'd finished playing with it.
I was a very cruel mother.
(I emptied it out once he'd gone to bed though - and had to wash it all because the hoover bag was full of dust. I just don't think things through)
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Post by Patrick on Oct 16, 2008 13:08:06 GMT
I once hoovered up my son's Lego because he refused to tidy it away after he'd finished playing with it. I was a very cruel mother. (I emptied it out once he'd gone to bed though - and had to wash it all because the hoover bag was full of dust. I just don't think things through) Erm........... You didn't want to do that!
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Post by Alpha Hooligan on Oct 16, 2008 14:44:20 GMT
Pure class Mrs E. ;D
AH
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Post by housesparrow on Oct 21, 2008 16:23:16 GMT
Does anyone remember minibricks? They were the British made equivalent of Lego, and what we played with as children. They were little bricks - all brick-shaped and all red - that fitted into one another - rubbery in texture and therefore less hard.
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Post by Patrick on Oct 21, 2008 18:16:01 GMT
There's some you can buy now that are made of fired clay and you stick'em together with cement-ey type stuff - which if you get bored of your structure, just put it warm water and it'll fall to bits so you can build something else!
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