A Lego Walkman And An Awesome Mix

A Lego Walkman And An Awesome Mix, Sony TPS-L2

Grab your Awesome Mix cassette tape, a few batteries, and don’t forget your Walkman. It’s time to go on an adventure, and maybe save the galaxy. This is the Lego Walkman, specifically the Sony TPS-L2 Walkman, built by H.Y. Leung. The iconic blue, silver, and orange portable cassette player was first released in 1979. This Lego version has the clear window, all the various buttons and sliders, and even the duel headphone ports. The orange foam headphone covers stand out, a very hard shape to make with Lego. A smooth flatish oval with no studs showing. The only thing not Lego here is the headphone cord. The whole build even come with two different cassette tapes. Featuring the Awesome Mix Vol. 1 from Guardians fo the Galaxy, and a blank tape ready to record whatever. Both can be inserted and removed from the Lego Walkman.

A Lego Walkman And An Awesome Mix, Sony TPS-L2, Awesome Mix Tapes

You can find more of this Lego Sony TPS-L2 Walkman over here: https://www.flickr.com/photos/76190514@N06/48428650777/

Unboxing The New Family TV

”A family has bought a new TV during the 70s” Lego MOC

This great Lego MOC is titled “A family has bought a new TV during the 70s” and is the creation of Johan Alexanderson (Jalex). They ended up using some reference photos to make sure the 1970s feeling was accurate. The end result is uncanny. Especially the old console television; I can just imagine the wooden walnut veneer. The packaging/box is also a stand out detail. It would probably take a whole Lego Minifigure family to move this TV. It also looks like a super reductive version of the famous Vincent van Gogh painting “The Starry Night” hanging on the wall.

“The idea for this creation simply came from memories when I was a kid and the exciting moment when my family came home with a brand new TV.”

1970s Console Television Detail

Check out the “A family has bought a new TV during the 70s” MOC by Johan Alexanderson (Jalex) over here: https://flickr.com/photos/78666052@N05/46897412025/

This 70s Style Lego Kitchen is very Retro

LegoJalex's Lego Kitchen From The 70s

Lego can be used to create anything. Most people stick to the Minifigure scale when building. But, when you go slightly larger you can create stuff that looks extremely realistic. This very retro Lego Kitchen looks like it could be at home in the 1970s. Some the details are perfect, the orange kitchen walls, the tile counter top, and old radio. Using the Lego grill piece for the mini blinds is ingenious. As is including the electrical cords for the hanging lamp, and portable radio.

This 70s Style Lego Kitchen, built by LegoJalex, is over on Flickr: https://www.flickr.com/photos/78666052@N05/15645000696/

LegoJalex has also created a 1980s Style Kids Room over here: http://everydaybricks.com/etch-sketch-view-master-rc-car-lego-kids-room/

Lego Atari Pong

Quy's Lego Atari Pong

This Lego MOC of the Atari Pong system is spot on. From the fake wood cabinet, to the joysticks everything has been carefully thought through. Speaking of which, those joysticks are genius; using Lego tires worked well. Here the retro styling works well with Lego. The system currently doesn’t work, which like most Atari Pong systems is accurate.

Atari Pong, built by Quy, can be found on Flickr: http://www.flickr.com/photos/nxtquy/9068875671/