Name:
Jacob Sparre Andersen
Age:
<30 (we couldn't get his real age out of him)
Gender:
Male
Location:
København (Copenhagen), Denmark, Europe
Email:
jacob@ldraw.org (one of many)
History with LDraw:
Jacob started using LEGO as a little boy. "It was a toy. And apparently a
good one." He remembers getting a big red technic tractor the
christmas before his seventh birthday, "My dad and uncles really
felt they "had" to help me build it."
Jacob continues to play with LEGO because at heart he feels he is
just a big kid. That is also why he is a physicist, he just has to
play with stuff!
Town is his favorite line. He enjoys building larger sets and
models as he seems to enjoy the level of detail that this allows. He
pulls his inspiration from places such as beautiful cities all the
way to comic books (his favorite seems to be "Yoko Tsuno").
Sal Colibri - From the Yoko Tsuno comic
in the issue "Kanonan Fra Kra."
Jacob's favorite set is the
#8880
followed closely by the Yacht Club set. His ideal set would be, and
I quote, "larger!". He really feels the sets should be more like #
675 and #8880
it seems to open up the imagination and creativity of the user.
Things to Consider:
Jacob Says: "LUGNET is a great resource for builders and creators." ...and
quotes this post from LUGNET, which is the central site for LEGO discission online:
Subject: The Refocusing of LEGO
From: "Lou Zucaro" <lou@pause.com> Lou Zucaro
Newsgroups: lugnet.lego.direct
Followup-To: lugnet.dear-lego
Date: Mon, 12 Mar 2001 17:33:02 GMT
Highlighted: !! (details)
Hi everybody,
Over the last few months, I have begun to come out
of my second LEGO Dark Ages. Whereas my first Dark Ages was
brought on by *growing up*... ...As stated so simply in the 1979
LEGO US catalog, "The magic of the LEGO concept is best summed up
in one word: flexibility".... ...Refocus on building. Refocus on
themes. Refocus on detail. Refocus on the integrity of the product
and what it stands for, and don’t give in to the fear that if it’s
not electronic, people won’t buy it. They are different mindsets,
and they can co-exist. Look back at your past successes and bring
your product lines, themes and sets back in line with where they
were. Give LEGO enthusiasts of all ages the opportunity to find
that magic again.
Click here to read the whole article