Simple vignettes on an 8x8 plate is a good place to start. Alternatively, customising retail sets is another way to develop your creative ability, skills and ideas.
I think you have some great points and i enjoy the self criticism, breaking down your own mocs and grading them rather than criticizing others creations. I think it was a nice way to approach the subject👍 also you have some dope mocs
I've only ever made tiny mocs, and I often felt like they weren't really mocs because they were 'too small'. This is a great encouraging video. Thanks!
Thank you for this, I’m gonna start doing Lego Mocs on RUclips and have just recently started taking my builds serious. This video was very helpful and I’ll probably rewatch it before each of my Mocs so I have a plan for my plan. You have inspired me so much in the short time I’ve been subscribed and I want to thank you for that.
Thank you for putting together this awesome presentation. Your experience of building MOC‘s really shined through in this video. I appreciated the design principle lead approach a lot. Keep up the awesome work!
If there is anything I do a lot, it is improving on the design as I go. So far I've built quite a few things that required building techniques I wasn't planning on beforehand. They sort of organically spring up during the building process, or from the pieces I find when searching. As an example: As someone that almost never used technic, I wanted to make use of ratcheted leg parts that I believe are from some sort of bionicle figure (I have no idea which set) that I picked up from a second hand collection. When I built a mech with it, I found a way to attach the cockpit in a way that it could go up and down, hanging in some sort of frame. It both looks great and has a function, but I could have never thought this up without keeping up the building process. Just another example of why step 10, trusting the process, is such an important tip.
like your tips. I think your Mocs are a nice contrast with all the big epic Mocs that had me get into lego again. im only just starting with lego again. I did place a couple brick link orders to fill up my catalogue (I just had my childhood legos, mostly red blue and yellow brick). for your channel btw, I don't think the face cam adds to this video as you are just reading out a script, it seems a bit weird. just trine give some constructive criticism back hehe :)
This is a very good set of advice. I’m building my first moc-started in Studio, bricks on order from bricklink. A lot of the things you discuss here, are things I stumbled with. Good advice.
Fantastic video man! Very helpful for those who are just starting out or for me who’s been building for a longgg time thank you for posting this video it’s open my eyes as to how you build how I and others have to find out how we like to build! I hope to see more videos like this soon they are thought provoking and helpful!
Thank you so much for making this, I've never been so inspired to start something than I am after watching this. I would love to make a display MOC or landscape MOC for the Lego Dune Ornithopter, I've seen stands online but I feel that a landing pad would do it more justice. Thank you again!!!
11th tip: start with the main setpieces and build the rest around it. I'm currently building the Ark opening from Indiana jones where the main setpiece is the ark itself and the camera equipment. I then base the rest of the moc around those things.
Really appreciate you making this video man! All tips are great and would definitely put emphasis on your last 3 tips, especially story. Looking forward to more of your projects!🤙
Stupendous Video, so well thought out with excellent tips! I especially appreciate your Legoism philosophy, couldn't agree more. I have been brewing up an idea to make a architecture/building MOC which is not typical for me as I usually make Star Wars ships. Question for you: how would you classify your MOCs, would it be correct to call them Dioramas? If not, what would you call them? I strive for playability in my builds which is much different from your visual impact/photography style which you clearly have mastered. As I am developing my idea I am trying distinguish and label what I am aiming for which is a bit different from your MOC building style. Keep up the fantastic content! I will be watching
You invited viewers to ask specific questions about MOC building. I'm quite new to LEGO, but already curious about MOCs and best practices when designing, so I found this video very interesting. What are some of your more technical tips? I recently started building someone's Rebrickable design and I'm finding it challenging because so many of the join points are only a single stud. When I try to ad more pieces, those single-stud joins are just breaking apart. So that kind of more "engineering" type question is what I'm curious about. If you have such a video, please direct me to it...or let me know if you ever make one! Thanks!
Just wanted to say that the videos you make could be a bit nicer to me if you were actually looking forward. It basicly looks like you are just reading a script. (Just advice😃) Sorry about the acount, it is my dad's. 🙃
My username describes my style of building. Scraping every MOC i start
True.
Fortnite moment
Same
Simple vignettes on an 8x8 plate is a good place to start. Alternatively, customising retail sets is another way to develop your creative ability, skills and ideas.
The LEGO MOC community is so nice it's actually insane
It’s the best part of the Lego community ❤
@@brickinshmirtz4012id go as far as to say the only kind part of the lego fandom
I think you have some great points and i enjoy the self criticism, breaking down your own mocs and grading them rather than criticizing others creations. I think it was a nice way to approach the subject👍 also you have some dope mocs
I've only ever made tiny mocs, and I often felt like they weren't really mocs because they were 'too small'. This is a great encouraging video. Thanks!
Great video! Would love to see something similar to this regarding photography of the Mocs
These are some great tips and MOCs! and I totally agree with your idea of "legoism"
Great video! Definitely will think about these tips more as I build! I’d be interested in how you photograph your mocs, thanks!
That old Felucia-style MOC you did is so cool!
Nice tips!! Btw, my fav moc of your channel ir the y-wing in yavin 4, so well builded and detailed, hope to see more prequels and cw mocs too.
Thank you for this, I’m gonna start doing Lego Mocs on RUclips and have just recently started taking my builds serious. This video was very helpful and I’ll probably rewatch it before each of my Mocs so I have a plan for my plan. You have inspired me so much in the short time I’ve been subscribed and I want to thank you for that.
Thank you for putting together this awesome presentation. Your experience of building MOC‘s really shined through in this video. I appreciated the design principle lead approach a lot. Keep up the awesome work!
If there is anything I do a lot, it is improving on the design as I go. So far I've built quite a few things that required building techniques I wasn't planning on beforehand. They sort of organically spring up during the building process, or from the pieces I find when searching.
As an example: As someone that almost never used technic, I wanted to make use of ratcheted leg parts that I believe are from some sort of bionicle figure (I have no idea which set) that I picked up from a second hand collection. When I built a mech with it, I found a way to attach the cockpit in a way that it could go up and down, hanging in some sort of frame. It both looks great and has a function, but I could have never thought this up without keeping up the building process.
Just another example of why step 10, trusting the process, is such an important tip.
like your tips. I think your Mocs are a nice contrast with all the big epic Mocs that had me get into lego again. im only just starting with lego again. I did place a couple brick link orders to fill up my catalogue (I just had my childhood legos, mostly red blue and yellow brick).
for your channel btw, I don't think the face cam adds to this video as you are just reading out a script, it seems a bit weird. just trine give some constructive criticism back hehe :)
This is a very good set of advice. I’m building my first moc-started in Studio, bricks on order from bricklink. A lot of the things you discuss here, are things I stumbled with. Good advice.
Great tips, it helps planning my designs for sure by bringing structure to a fundamentally build-as-you-go process. Many thanks!
Fantastic video man! Very helpful for those who are just starting out or for me who’s been building for a longgg time thank you for posting this video it’s open my eyes as to how you build how I and others have to find out how we like to build! I hope to see more videos like this soon they are thought provoking and helpful!
Thank you so much for making this, I've never been so inspired to start something than I am after watching this. I would love to make a display MOC or landscape MOC for the Lego Dune Ornithopter, I've seen stands online but I feel that a landing pad would do it more justice. Thank you again!!!
These are awesome tips. Please do more on this! My favorite moc of yours is Yavin 4 and I wanted to make one of my own
This is a very helpful video im a smaller lego creator who makes Lego MOC's!! Thank you for the help with these amazing tips !!
Great and welcome tips, thank you. Your Andor series looks awesome btw, I loved series 1 of the show and recognize the scenes.
11th tip: start with the main setpieces and build the rest around it.
I'm currently building the Ark opening from Indiana jones where the main setpiece is the ark itself and the camera equipment.
I then base the rest of the moc around those things.
great video!
Great tips :) Really enjoyed the video and everything resonated perfectly with me.
Very good video! You have a new sub
Really appreciate you making this video man! All tips are great and would definitely put emphasis on your last 3 tips, especially story. Looking forward to more of your projects!🤙
This video slaps no lie 🔥
Some good tips here! Thanks!
What a great video, very helpful 🙌
awesome tips
Thanks for these tips!
Phenomenal video, you addressed some great points here
i usually pick an angle and build based on that cuz i know i want that to be the camera friendly side
Great video! Very good tipps ! Please keep it up !!!💌
Great tips!🔥😎
Let's goooo. Thank u so much bro🎉
You should definitely do a justice league moc series
Great video, thank you.
U should hold more masterclass. This is inspiring.
Awesome Abe !
Very good tips😊
Thank you for the tips! 👍
This also applies to a lot of art and strongly to minecraft building lol, at least the way I do it... minus budget issues heh
you sir, just earned a sub
Stupendous Video, so well thought out with excellent tips! I especially appreciate your Legoism philosophy, couldn't agree more.
I have been brewing up an idea to make a architecture/building MOC which is not typical for me as I usually make Star Wars ships. Question for you: how would you classify your MOCs, would it be correct to call them Dioramas? If not, what would you call them? I strive for playability in my builds which is much different from your visual impact/photography style which you clearly have mastered. As I am developing my idea I am trying distinguish and label what I am aiming for which is a bit different from your MOC building style.
Keep up the fantastic content! I will be watching
You invited viewers to ask specific questions about MOC building. I'm quite new to LEGO, but already curious about MOCs and best practices when designing, so I found this video very interesting. What are some of your more technical tips? I recently started building someone's Rebrickable design and I'm finding it challenging because so many of the join points are only a single stud. When I try to ad more pieces, those single-stud joins are just breaking apart. So that kind of more "engineering" type question is what I'm curious about. If you have such a video, please direct me to it...or let me know if you ever make one! Thanks!
Love this video
he made a whole corporate slideshow
i subscribed!
ChatGPT?
Biggest brain in town 🤓
🫡🫡🫡
Just wanted to say that the videos you make could be a bit nicer to me if you were actually looking forward. It basicly looks like you are just reading a script. (Just advice😃) Sorry about the acount, it is my dad's. 🙃
Absolute pro tip that changed my building forever: do. not. buy. lego bricks. Buy knock-off brands. They're far cheaper and do just the same.
Thanks for the tips!
This video slaps no lie 🔥
so true!