That’s what I’m saying. I know they get blueprints and measurements online to help with accurate scaling, but this is just crazy. Like I look at some of the pieces he puts down and I’m just like “literally, how do you know that that piece needs to go there. Like why that piece of all pieces?” It’s insane
@@Basketcase_02 figured. I don’t think I have the patience though, lol. Knowing me, I’d get halfway through building and realize I needed to use a different piece and have to take it all apart😑😂
For me it's more or less knowing what I want to create and then following what I picture. Seeing what parts best reflect what you picure. However, most of the time during the process I change it to make it look better, or alter it due to lack of legos.
I remember building the KMS Bismarc aswel over lock-down, but in a much smaller scale. I included a float-plane, a mini flag, tiny lifeboats, main and secondary batteries, AA guns, (all weapons were rotational) and art work on the deck. I never built the red under the ship itself though. Good work with your model!
Man, I'm getting more and more jealous of you and your talent to build such awesome things from Legos with every video you put out here. Please be my sensei somewhere in the future so I'll be able to create such amazing builds myself one day. Keep up the good work!
The irony is, Bismarck would never have been sunk if an "outdated" Swordfish biplane hadn't managed to fly under the Bismarck's AA flak and landed its torpedo on the unprotected rudder, which had been set into a turning position (as was common for trying to avoid torpedo attacks). Anyway, this is an impressive build! I would never have considered half of what you use to build some of the more "weird" angles that ships typically need to be seaworthy.
I'm building a large lego ship (6' 10'') and it seems like you built this fast. I've been working for 2 months and I'm halfway done. maybe its because of my lack of bricks, but still seems very quick.
You should do the invasion of Berlin, really I just want to see your version of a panther or King Tiger (Tiger 2) because I love the way you build your tanks!
I want to see you compete on LEGOMASTERS! You should do a video building the Tirpitz next! (Run this video through a Left/Right image flip and you should be good to go!)
Imagine if JD Brick decided to remake the WW1 part of The King's Man (2021), but in Lego stopmotion. that would surely be a nightmare. Edit: i would spend my money AND time building a lego bismark, and then place it onto the actual bismark as a memorial. same for all sunken ships that participated in the destruction of the Bismark. Edit #2: also, imagine putting that lego ship on a body of water.
The Bismarck class was a pair of fast battleships built for Nazi Germany's Kriegsmarine shortly before the outbreak of World War II. The ships were the largest and most powerful warships built for the Kriegsmarine; displacing more than 41,000 metric tons normally, they were armed with a battery of eight 38 cm guns and were capable of a top speed of 30 knots. Bismarck was laid down in July 1936 and completed in September 1940, while her sister Tirpitz's keel was laid in October 1936 and work finished in February 1941. The ships were ordered in response to the French Richelieu-class battleships. They were designed with the traditional role of engaging enemy battleships in home waters in mind, though the German naval command envisioned employing the ships as long-range commerce raiders against British shipping in the Atlantic Ocean. As such, their design represented the strategic confusion that dominated German naval construction in the 1930s. Both ships had short service careers. Bismarck conducted only one operation, Operation Rheinübung, a sortie into the North Atlantic to raid supply convoys sent from North America to Great Britain. During the operation, she destroyed the British battlecruiser HMS Hood and damaged the new battleship Prince of Wales in the Battle of the Denmark Strait. Bismarck was defeated and sunk in a final engagement after a three-day chase by the Royal Navy. Although some disagreement over the cause of the sinking persists, evidence reviewed by Robert Ballard and James Cameron indicates that her loss was due to a combination of battle damage and scuttling, with the Royal Navy battleships Rodney and King George V inflicting fatal damage before Bismarck's crew scuttled the foundering ship. Tirpitz's career was less dramatic; she operated in the Baltic Sea briefly in 1941 before being sent to Norwegian waters in 1942, where she acted as a fleet in being, threatening the convoys from Britain to the Soviet Union. She was repeatedly attacked by the Royal Navy and Royal Air Force between 1942 and 1944, but she was not seriously damaged in these attacks. In 1944, Lancaster bombers hit the ship with two Tallboy bombs, which caused extensive internal damage and capsized the battleship. Tirpitz was broken up for scrap between 1948 and 1957.
Despite what the common myths and songs say, Bismarck is not the largest and most powerful battleship ever made. while she was the largest battleship in the world until the 13th of December 1941 when battleship Yamato was commissioned, she was never the most powerful. She carried eight 14.9-inch (38 cm) guns, while HMS Rodney, USS West Virginia, USS Washington, USS Massachusetts, and USS Iowa carried 16-inch (40.6 cm) guns, IJN Nagato carried 16.1-inch (41 cm) guns, while IJN Yamato carried 18.1-inch guns. Nor did Bismarck carry the thickest armor, having a 12.6-inch (32 cm) belt, while the previous class of battleships, KMS Scharnhorst had a 13.8-inch belt (35 cm), HMS Prince of Wales had a 14-15-inch belt (35.6-38.1 cm), while IJN Yamato had a 16.1-inch (41 cm)
Im no historian but i believe that the crew of bismarck scuttled the ship because they were scared that the bismarck would be captured by the British navy (please correct me if im wrong)
insane model... hats off to this creation
Hello again LCM love your vids, ur an inspiration 🎉🎉🎉🎉
I love how the exterior is so beautifully executed, then the interior is literally cobbled together with whatever spare parts were lying around.
Average modern LEGO set
So true!😄
Pride of a nation a beast made of steel bismarck in motion
BISMARCK IN MOTION
Now majestically laying at the bottom of the goddamn ocean
He was made to rule the waves across the seven seas
To lead the war machine!
To rule the waves and lead the
*k r i e g s m a r i n e!*
@@censoreduser THE TERROR OF THE SEAS
Teacher: no building paper airplanes!
The kids in the back: “builds 1:150 accurate Lego Bismarck”
Me excited to see a reply: oh boy let’s see what’s up!
Scammer: Message me for free rovbucks!
the class clown is doing his best to distract the teacher from the kids in the back for sure
Ima make sure the snitch won't live to tell the teachers
@@mp1115real 1 year late but lol
Man the ability to just look at bricks and know the right ones to pick and combine is an insane ability…
That’s what I’m saying. I know they get blueprints and measurements online to help with accurate scaling, but this is just crazy. Like I look at some of the pieces he puts down and I’m just like “literally, how do you know that that piece needs to go there. Like why that piece of all pieces?” It’s insane
@@gwhite20I can say that even after 11 years of building it’s usually trial and error when looking for the “perfect” part
I think I have that abality
@@Basketcase_02 figured. I don’t think I have the patience though, lol. Knowing me, I’d get halfway through building and realize I needed to use a different piece and have to take it all apart😑😂
For me it's more or less knowing what I want to create and then following what I picture. Seeing what parts best reflect what you picure. However, most of the time during the process I change it to make it look better, or alter it due to lack of legos.
How long did this take?!?
Huge respect
Fake!
Fake scammer
How is it fake??
How
@@Humpo48 wut
What amazes me is how stable the build is!
I remember building the KMS Bismarc aswel over lock-down, but in a much smaller scale. I included a float-plane, a mini flag, tiny lifeboats, main and secondary batteries, AA guns, (all weapons were rotational) and art work on the deck. I never built the red under the ship itself though.
Good work with your model!
Im new on this hoby, this is just insane. Nice build!
I'd love to see Gettysburg, Midway, Kursk, etc...stop motions in the future given how great and historically accurate your content is
I’m in!!!!!!
I can not imagine the time it took to build this. You have an awesome ability to build with Lego. Keep it up!
Epic build for sure. Even the filler brick alone is mindboggling.
This is awesome, the only improvement would be if bismarck by sabaton was playing.
Sorry can't agree with you there they just romantised a battle in which many men died horrible deaths
@@thelegoduck8679 I disagree with you because Sabaton never glorified war or death, but I respect your opinion, have a good day
Man, I'm getting more and more jealous of you and your talent to build such awesome things from Legos with every video you put out here. Please be my sensei somewhere in the future so I'll be able to create such amazing builds myself one day. Keep up the good work!
I think it takes almost a whole day to finish this lego Bismarck, but I really want to buy one of these and build this big battleship.
That's a beautiful ship, one of my favourite historical battleships too!
Simply amazing!
I'm currently building my first big battleship moc and your video really helped getting an Idea of what's possible! Thank you and keep going!!
The irony is, Bismarck would never have been sunk if an "outdated" Swordfish biplane hadn't managed to fly under the Bismarck's AA flak and landed its torpedo on the unprotected rudder, which had been set into a turning position (as was common for trying to avoid torpedo attacks).
Anyway, this is an impressive build! I would never have considered half of what you use to build some of the more "weird" angles that ships typically need to be seaworthy.
Unreal talent and patience
perfect and beautiful, very well made.
I'm building a large lego ship (6' 10'') and it seems like you built this fast. I've been working for 2 months and I'm halfway done. maybe its because of my lack of bricks, but still seems very quick.
You should do the invasion of Berlin, really I just want to see your version of a panther or King Tiger (Tiger 2) because I love the way you build your tanks!
From the mist a shape a ship is taking form...
Pride of a nation a beast made of steel
I really wish I had the Lego pieces to build this masterpiece.
Wow!! Very very cool!!!
I want to see you compete on LEGOMASTERS! You should do a video building the Tirpitz next! (Run this video through a Left/Right image flip and you should be good to go!)
Imagine if JD Brick decided to remake the WW1 part of The King's Man (2021), but in Lego stopmotion. that would surely be a nightmare.
Edit: i would spend my money AND time building a lego bismark, and then place it onto the actual bismark as a memorial. same for all sunken ships that participated in the destruction of the Bismark.
Edit #2: also, imagine putting that lego ship on a body of water.
The man is on board for success
this is my favorite video on your channel
i fan of your stop motions man,good luck for the next videos
This is a joy to behold.
Awesome job! It looks amazing!
Absolutely amazing!
Wow great job!
Get out of here hacker
This is crazy epic, did you make this completely on your own?
If this was minifigure scale, this would be one of the largest LEGO builds on earth.
The Bismarck class was a pair of fast battleships built for Nazi Germany's Kriegsmarine shortly before the outbreak of World War II. The ships were the largest and most powerful warships built for the Kriegsmarine; displacing more than 41,000 metric tons normally, they were armed with a battery of eight 38 cm guns and were capable of a top speed of 30 knots. Bismarck was laid down in July 1936 and completed in September 1940, while her sister Tirpitz's keel was laid in October 1936 and work finished in February 1941. The ships were ordered in response to the French Richelieu-class battleships. They were designed with the traditional role of engaging enemy battleships in home waters in mind, though the German naval command envisioned employing the ships as long-range commerce raiders against British shipping in the Atlantic Ocean. As such, their design represented the strategic confusion that dominated German naval construction in the 1930s.
Both ships had short service careers. Bismarck conducted only one operation, Operation Rheinübung, a sortie into the North Atlantic to raid supply convoys sent from North America to Great Britain. During the operation, she destroyed the British battlecruiser HMS Hood and damaged the new battleship Prince of Wales in the Battle of the Denmark Strait. Bismarck was defeated and sunk in a final engagement after a three-day chase by the Royal Navy. Although some disagreement over the cause of the sinking persists, evidence reviewed by Robert Ballard and James Cameron indicates that her loss was due to a combination of battle damage and scuttling, with the Royal Navy battleships Rodney and King George V inflicting fatal damage before Bismarck's crew scuttled the foundering ship.
Tirpitz's career was less dramatic; she operated in the Baltic Sea briefly in 1941 before being sent to Norwegian waters in 1942, where she acted as a fleet in being, threatening the convoys from Britain to the Soviet Union. She was repeatedly attacked by the Royal Navy and Royal Air Force between 1942 and 1944, but she was not seriously damaged in these attacks. In 1944, Lancaster bombers hit the ship with two Tallboy bombs, which caused extensive internal damage and capsized the battleship. Tirpitz was broken up for scrap between 1948 and 1957.
Despite what the common myths and songs say, Bismarck is not the largest and most powerful battleship ever made. while she was the largest battleship in the world until the 13th of December 1941 when battleship Yamato was commissioned, she was never the most powerful. She carried eight 14.9-inch (38 cm) guns, while HMS Rodney, USS West Virginia, USS Washington, USS Massachusetts, and USS Iowa carried 16-inch (40.6 cm) guns, IJN Nagato carried 16.1-inch (41 cm) guns, while IJN Yamato carried 18.1-inch guns. Nor did Bismarck carry the thickest armor, having a 12.6-inch (32 cm) belt, while the previous class of battleships, KMS Scharnhorst had a 13.8-inch belt (35 cm), HMS Prince of Wales had a 14-15-inch belt (35.6-38.1 cm), while IJN Yamato had a 16.1-inch (41 cm)
This is the best Lego build I have ever seen, mate...
Great done master!
And he did it all in 15 minutes. Remarkable.
You should do battle of iwo jima next
Bro dose so good he’s a big part of my life thanks
So cool man
Saboton music intensifes
BISMARCK IN MOTION
A BEAST MADE OUT OF STEEL
Amazing stuff here JD
Honestly u need to do the siege of jadoville lego😁
Can u make an instruction manual Becuase i would totally buy it 🤑🤑
EARNED ME SUB BTW 👍
it's amazing what you're doing keep it up :)
Nice video 👍
I'd love to see a 1:1 scale of the Bismarck in Lego, it'd be a goddamn monster
this is awesome man! keep it up!
Please make the battle of Gettysburg every one would appreciate😊
Brilliant 🤩
Maybe for a video idea try the battle in where the mighty battle cruiser hood was blown up by the bismarck.
Sunk by a coordinated british attack and the sheer weight of the testicles of a biplane crew.
Does it float tho?
Sabaton would be proud
This is what brickmeet does
Amazing
Dang that's cool
Cool!
Thanks JD, any chance of seeing more of how to stop motion videos? Especially how you video flying aircraft motion.
If you submitted this to LEGO as a set idea, you could make a lot of money.
Finally a new upload its been so long
Anti-military Lego: NOOOO YOU CAN'T DO THAT WAR BAD!
People anyways: How about I do anyways?
Imagine how much money does it take to make the whole ship 💀
Splendid! But by the looks of it, isn't the hull a little too tall? (Excluding the waterline hull)
Please come the video of how you did the war of Gallipoli.
This the biggest battle ship I have see❤😮n
Was this submitted to the Lego set designer
Good tutorial
I wish i could do something like that, i gain the motivation then look at the legos i have and give up
I've nearly watched nearly every video
And I love your channel
bro did this in lego!!!!!
Ur the Most baller stop motion channel
Wooden Planes: Oh look at there chaps! It's the Bismarck!
THANK YOU
bro amazing
If I had to choose between the Bismarck and the Titanic, I would choose this one without second thoughts.
tell me the link where you bought it
When will it be for sale?
*JD Brick Productions* hmmm, looks ok for regular Lego bricks, you should have used Cobi bricks, more and better fitting slops would have been better
Can u please make instructions on how to make it please 🙏
Im no historian but i believe that the crew of bismarck scuttled the ship because they were scared that the bismarck would be captured by the British navy (please correct me if im wrong)
Cool i Likes it
Do you plan to shoot animation on the events of the eastern front?
how many time did u need to do this?
Make a mini version on your store
Does it float?
So good
Wow
Just wow
I want to your bismarc model be in your shop. Then i will buy it!!! But soooo coool😀😀👍👍👌👌👌
Do you have or sell instructions on how to build the Bismarck?
I love the structure and the turrets how long did that take to build
cool
Where do you get all the parts from for your creations
Lego
Do you ship your build packs to Canada