>>10198848Thanks for the feedback. The whole thing has definitely been a learning experience since I know next to nothing about the architectural language of Lego so to speak
>The brown walls should be stitched together in a brick pattern or in some patchwork interlocking fashion to keep the walls from coming apart.Yeah, I had some initially shaky construction going on as I was originally intending to just block out details and keep the whole thing much smaller, though now that I've accepted it's going to blow up and rebuilt the whole wall, the joining is much tighter.
>I'm not sure what your greebles are attempting to convey but they project out quite a bit and look sort of random.Yeah, I had to go back and clean up a bit where I was letting attention to detail trump aesthetics. I think this result looks much better.
>The steps and columns of the portico look pretty good, as well as the detail with the edges of the tan ingots on the left and right of what I assume is the entranceThanks. I'm going to have to expand that area to be about as wide as one flat section of the wall for it to be proportionately correct, but getting the portico to work at all was a huge headache and I'm dreading it. The details on the side are actually just windows.
>Regardless of any praise or criticism it's clear you need to start touching bricks. Your piece use and construction techniques are kind of wackFair enough. I don't intend to pick up any plastic crack anytime soon though and just found out Studio was a thing a few days ago so I'm treating it more like an art design tool than a legitimate lego set designer (which probably isn't helping things)