The colors of LEGO bricks cover a wide spectrum and allow builders to carefully design amazing models. Besides the currently colors in production, the LEGO company released more than 180 different colors over the years. This book is the definite LEGO color guide and includes accurate photographs for each brick color. Moreover, it provides precise color definitions that are based on actual colorimetric measurements. Each color is compared to its nearest matches, making it easy to distinguish similar colors. The book bridges the different naming and identification systems of the LEGO company and Bricklink. This book is the ultimate resource for the color conscious LEGO builder
Author Biography
Dr. Christoph Bartneck is a professor and director of postgraduate studies at the HIT Lab NZ of the University of Canterbury. He has a background in Industrial Design and Human-Computer Interaction, and his projects and studies have been published in leading journals, newspapers, and conferences. His interests lie in the fields of Human-Computer Interaction, Science and Technology Studies, and Visual Design. More specifically, he focuses on the effect of anthropomorphism on human-robot interaction. As a secondary research interest he works on bibliometric analyses, agent based social simulations, and the critical review on scientific processes and policies. In the field of Design Christoph investigates the history of product design, tessellations and photography. He is a founding member of New Zealand's largest LEGO User Group (LUG 4/2) and he is also the founder of the Imagination Station, New Zealand's first lear and play center using LEGO bricks. He has worked for several international organizations including the Technology Centre of Hannover (Germany), LEGO (Denmark), Eagle River Interactive (USA), Philips Research (Netherlands), ATR (Japan), and The Eindhoven University of Technology (Netherlands). Christoph is an associate editor of the International Journal of Social Robotics, the International Journal of Human Computer Studies and Entertainment Computing Journal. Christoph is a member of the New Zealand Institute for Language Brain & Behavior, ACM SIGCHI, The New Zealand Association Of Scientists and Academic Freedom Aotearoa. The press regularly reports on his work, including the New Scientist, Scientific American, Popular Science, Wired, New York Times, The Times, BBC, Huffington Post, Washington Post, The Guardian, and The Economist.