Category: Uncategorized

  • Lego People Cartoon Strip Generator

    LEGO Comic — Image Prompt Builder

    LEGO Comic — Image Prompt Builder

    This page turns your custom generator data into a single, SEO‑ready image prompt for a multi‑panel LEGO comic. It builds layout, story, and visual instructions so image models render consistent minifigs, sets, and scenes.

    Which text to paste here? For the best results, copy the first 5 lines of your final LEGO Fan Plans prompt (or the top 10 lines after you create your Fan Plans) and paste it into the fields below. This simple step helps keep your comic settings accurate, improves SEO, and makes your instructions easy for 8th-grade readers to understand.

    How to keep going in your image bot: You can continue this comic in any AI image bot. Paste the image prompt you made here, then add the provided continuation line near the buttons below.

    Tips: it’s best to start with no speech bubbles or blank bubbles. Keep text easy to read (about 12pt).

    Copy-Ready Image Prompt

  • “K – 7th grade World Language Speaking Drills.”

    K – 7th grade World Language Speaking Drills

    K – 7th grade World Language Speaking Drills

    Choose options below, then click Make Prompt. Copy or Reset just like the reference generator.

    Setup — Select Your Options

    Tip: For Novice levels, keep utterances short, recycle high-frequency language, and provide sentence frames/visuals.

    Your Assembled Prompt

    The generated prompt instructs an AI to draft a concise lesson sequence, cue cards, and a simple rubric aligned to your selections.

  • Aquarium Cleaning Business Start Up Forms prompt Generator

    Aquarium Cleaning Business Start Up Forms prompt Generator

    Aquarium Cleaning Business Start Up Forms prompt Generator

    Choose options below, then click Make Prompt. Copy or Reset just like the reference generator.

    Setup — Select Your Options

    Tip: “Standard clean + 10–20% water change” fits many tanks; reef systems usually include salinity/alkalinity/calcium checks.

    Your Assembled Prompt

    The generated prompt tells an AI to draft editable startup forms (DOCX + fillable PDF) and a one-page client checklist using your choices.

  • 25 AI Commands to Instantly Improve Your Lego Fan Plans

    25 AI Commands to Instantly Improve Your Lego Fan Plans

    Getting Started

    1) Starter Brief

    Quick plan summarizing the build and constraints.

    — click Reveal to view —

    2) Real-Build Mode

    Remove fantasy parts and enforce real techniques.

    — click Reveal to view —

    3) Size & Scale

    Lock the model to a target footprint or scale.

    — click Reveal to view —

    4) Color Policy

    Define color constraints and substitutions.

    — click Reveal to view —

    5) Constraint Recap

    Make sure nothing important got lost.

    — click Reveal to view —

    6) Assumptions Audit

    Uncover hidden defaults.

    — click Reveal to view —

    7) Scope Guardrails

    Prevent scope creep.

    — click Reveal to view —

    8) Timeboxing

    Plan around real deadlines.

    — click Reveal to view —

    9) Accessibility Mode

    Make instructions easier to follow.

    — click Reveal to view —

    Parts & Inventory

    10) BrickLink Parts List

    Get a complete, purchasable bill of materials.

    — click Reveal to view —

    11) Cost Optimization

    Lower price and prefer common parts.

    — click Reveal to view —

    12) Swap Rare Parts

    Replace hard-to-find items with equivalents.

    — click Reveal to view —

    13) Use My Inventory

    Tailor the plan to what you own.

    — click Reveal to view —

    14) Color Conflict Report

    Catch unavailable color choices.

    — click Reveal to view —

    15) Cost & Weight Estimate

    Know the budget and physical heft.

    — click Reveal to view —

    16) Region Availability Filter

    Buyable where you live.

    — click Reveal to view —

    17) Part Category Caps

    Keep the mix simple.

    — click Reveal to view —

    18) Environmental Constraints

    Heat, humidity, handling.

    — click Reveal to view —

    19) Spare Parts Plan

    Order a little extra, smartly.

    — click Reveal to view —

    20) Palette Lock

    Stay on-brand.

    — click Reveal to view —

    Build Planning

    21) Step-by-Step Guide

    Procedural instructions with checkpoints.

    — click Reveal to view —

    22) Stability Plan

    Reinforce the internal core.

    — click Reveal to view —

    23) Technique Request (SNOT, etc.)

    Style-specific instructions.

    — click Reveal to view —

    24) Technic Integration

    Axles, pins, gearing where needed.

    — click Reveal to view —

    25) Display Base / Stand

    Make it shelf-ready.

    — click Reveal to view —

    26) Submodel Map

    Divide and conquer.

    — click Reveal to view —

    27) Alternate Technique Plan

    Options to choose from.

    — click Reveal to view —

    28) Tooling Preference

    Match your software.

    — click Reveal to view —

    29) Photography Plan

    Make it look pro.

    — click Reveal to view —

    30) Packaging Mockup

    Box art concept.

    — click Reveal to view —

    Mockups & Visuals

    31) Final Build Mockup

    Multi-view end-of-build render.

    — click Reveal to view —

    32) Photo-Ready Parts Layout

    Neat grid for social posts.

    — click Reveal to view —

    33) Sticker-Free Look

    Pure brick aesthetics.

    — click Reveal to view —

    34) Kid-Friendly Mode

    Fewer steps, faster build.

    — click Reveal to view —

    35) Microscale Variant

    Under 100 parts challenge.

    — click Reveal to view —

    36) View Set Generator

    Consistent angles every time.

    — click Reveal to view —

    37) Texture Simplifier

    Cleaner surfaces.

    — click Reveal to view —

    38) Stress Test

    Spot likely failure points.

    — click Reveal to view —

    39) Instruction QA

    Proofread the build steps.

    — click Reveal to view —

    40) Parts Sanity Check

    Numbers that add up.

    — click Reveal to view —

    Quality & Troubleshooting

    41) Illegal Connection Check

    Catch issues before you buy parts.

    — click Reveal to view —

    42) Error Recovery

    Resume cleanly after a mis-step.

    — click Reveal to view —

    43) Progress Snapshot

    Save a checkpoint version.

    — click Reveal to view —

    44) Parts Diff

    Track changes clearly.

    — click Reveal to view —

    45) Build Time Estimate

    Plan your weekend.

    — click Reveal to view —

    46) Recolor Variant

    Try a new scheme fast.

    — click Reveal to view —

    47) Instruction Snippet Export

    Share a teaser.

    — click Reveal to view —

    48) License & Attribution

    Share responsibly.

    — click Reveal to view —

    Export & Sharing

    49) Export Packs

    All the files you need.

    — click Reveal to view —

    50) MOC Press Release

    Share your build like a pro.

    — click Reveal to view —

    51) Social Pack

    Ready to post.

    — click Reveal to view —

    52) Store Cart XML

    Fast checkout.

    — click Reveal to view —

    53) BOM by Submodel

    Stage your orders.

    — click Reveal to view —

    54) Instruction Localization

    Reach more builders.

    — click Reveal to view —

    55) Reproducibility Checklist

    Make outputs consistent across bots.

    — click Reveal to view —
  • Famous Dinosaurs

    LEGO1 — Famous Dinosaur Skeletons From Around The World (Simplex Generator)

    Level 1 — Snapshot

    
          

    Level 2 — Builder Brief

    
          

    Level 3 — Detailed Prompt

    
          

    Level 4 — Press‑Release

    
          

    Included Specimen Data (for accuracy)

    Curated highlights used to guide proportions and label text:

    • SUE (FMNH PR 2081) — ~40 ft (12.3 m) long, ~13 ft hip height; ~90% complete.
    • STAN — nearly complete T. rex; to be displayed at Natural History Museum Abu Dhabi.
    • Tristan Otto — original T. rex in Europe; ~12 m long, ~4 m tall mount.
    • Horridus — world‑class complete Triceratops horridus at Melbourne Museum.
    • Dippy — iconic Diplodocus carnegii cast, NHM London (replica lineage).
    • Apatosaurus louisae — classic Carnegie mount (with historic head correction).
    • Giraffatitan (Brachiosaurus) — tallest mounted dinosaur (~13.27 m) in Berlin.
    • Apex — remarkably complete Stegosaurus at AMNH (current display).
    • Máximo — Field Museum Patagotitan cast spanning 122 ft.

    This page is a standalone, WordPress‑safe generator. No external scripts, no inline event handlers.

  • Vintage Vehicle Showcase

    Vintage Car LEGO Build Guides | Lego Fan Plans

    Chrome look, LEGO reality — we make it easy

    LEGO® stopped making most true chrome parts, so shiny trim can be tough. No stress — we show practical ways to keep your build looking real with parts you can actually find.

    Use metallic for the mass, chrome for the pop — and we’ll show you exactly where, part by part.

    What we’ll do for you

    • Mark chrome hotspots: grilles, bumpers, trim, badges, exhaust tips.
    • Recommend metallic / light‑bluish gray stand‑ins for body panels.
    • Offer optional upgrades: third‑party chrome caps/trim or foil tape for thin lines.
    • Provide BrickLink part IDs and shopping lists for each approach.
    • Show side‑by‑side photos so you can choose official‑only or upgraded builds.

    Fast tips (9th‑grade simple)

    • Metallic parts = painted metal vibe; great for big areas.
    • Chrome accents = mirror flash; use sparingly for realism.
    • Keep cost low: start metallic, add chrome where it counts.
    • Durability: metallic is tougher for daily handling.

    🚘 Lego Fan Plans — Vintage Vehicle Showcase

    Step into our Lego Fan Plans Vintage Vehicle Showcase—your lane for classic cars and trucks translated into real-build LEGO® models. Browse step-by-step instructions, BrickLink-ready parts lists, and builder notes tuned for stable, display-worthy results.

    ❓ Q&A — Building Realistic Vintage Cars with LEGO®

    Why doesn’t LEGO make many chrome parts anymore?
    True mirror-chrome parts are rare/retired. To keep builds realistic and sourceable, we show you how to replace large shiny areas with metallic or light‑bluish gray and save chrome for small accents.
    Chrome vs. Metallic — what’s the difference?
    Metallic has a fine sparkle like painted metal—great for big panels. Chrome is mirror-bright—best for grilles, bumpers, thin trim, badges, and exhaust tips.
    Can I build with 100% official LEGO parts?
    Yes. Every plan works using official parts only. We list metallic/LBG stand‑ins for large areas and mark optional chrome accents as upgrades.
    Where do I buy the pieces?
    Each model page includes BrickLink‑ready part IDs and color notes. You can add them to your wanted list and shop from stores worldwide.
    Do I need glue, paint, or cutting?
    No. Builds are designed for standard LEGO connections. Optional extras (like thin chrome foil tape) are clearly labeled and not required.
    What scale are these cars?
    Scale varies by model and is listed on each plan. We target display‑friendly proportions so details read well and parts stay easy to source.
    How difficult are the builds?
    Difficulty is labeled per model. Each plan includes sub‑assemblies, part callouts, and reference views to keep steps clear.
    Can I start metallic and upgrade to chrome later?
    Yes. We mark chrome hotspots so those elements can be dropped in later without rebuilding the whole car.
    What if a part is rare or out of stock?
    We include an approved substitution list with shape/color alternates so your build stays accurate and affordable.
    Do you sell physical kits?
    We provide digital plans and BrickLink parts lists. Kits are not included; you can source parts from BrickLink stores using our lists.
  • 1937 Cadillac Series 75 Tour Bus

    1937 Cadillac Series 75 Tour Bus — LEGO1 Simplex Generator
    LEGO1 Simplex Generator

    1937 Cadillac Series 75 Tour Bus

    Museum‑quality LEGO clone • three sizes • lift‑off top • full interior • official parts only

    Build Controls

    Two columns, one scroll. Choose settings in these four boxes, then click Generate.

    Select sizes (3 outputs)
    All three are selected by default to produce parallel, scale‑tuned plans.

    Palette will be mapped to current LEGO element colors with BrickLink availability notes.

    If left empty, prompts will instruct the model to research authoritative sources on the 1937 Cadillac Series 75 tour bus conversions.

    Real‑Build Mode: ON Official LEGO elements only. No fantasy parts. Emphasize BrickLink inventory and legal techniques.
    How to read these plans Copy tools

    Level 1 — Snapshot

    Level 2 — Builder Brief

    Level 3 — Detailed Prompt

    Level 4 — Press‑Release

  • Auburn 852 Boattail Speedster (1936)

    Auburn 852 Boattail Speedster (1936) — LEGO Simplex Generator
    LEGO1 Simplex Generator

    Auburn 852 Boattail Speedster (1936)

    Museum‑quality LEGO clone • three sizes • full interior • official parts only

    Build Controls

    Use the four boxes below (2×2 layout). Each control uses dropdowns so you can lock choices. Hit Generate when ready.

    Select sizes (3 outputs)
    All three are enabled by default to create parallel instructions tuned per scale.

    Palette will be translated to current LEGO element colors with BrickLink availability notes.

    If left empty, prompts will still instruct the model to research verified references of the Auburn 852 Boattail Speedster (1936).

    Real‑Build Mode: ON Official LEGO elements only. No fantasy parts. Emphasize BrickLink inventory sourcing and legal techniques.
    How to read these plans Real‑Build Mode

    Level 1 — Snapshot

    Level 2 — Builder Brief

    Level 3 — Detailed Prompt

    Level 4 — Press‑Release

  • 1916 Simplex Crane Model 5 Touring Car

    1916 Simplex Crane Model 5 Touring Car

    Create builder-ready prompts, BOMs, and a stepwise instruction outline for a historically styled 1916 Simplex touring car model.

    Level 1 — Snapshot

    (Press Generate)

    Level 2 — Builder Brief

    (Press Generate)

    Level 3 — Detailed Prompt

    (Press Generate)

    Level 4 — Press Release / PR Brief

    (Press Generate)

    Build Summary

    Buildability Score:
    Bill of Materials (summary):
      Stepwise Build Guidance (high level):
        Stability & handling notes:

        Display / pose suggestions:

        Instruction Manual (excerpt):
        Final mockup preview info: 45° front-left isometric, soft gray background; export-ready images and instruction panels available in Visual Manual Mode.
      1. How to Read the Plans Our Generators Produce

        Simple Guide

        How to Use Our LEGO® Plans (Explained for Kids & Grown‑ups)

        These plans are real and buildable with real LEGO parts. We keep the steps clear, the pieces common, and the builds sturdy. If you can sort bricks, you can follow this.

        What the Four Boxes Mean

        📸 Level 1: Snapshot

        One short paragraph that tells you what you will build and about how big it is. Think of it like the picture on the box.

        🧰 Level 2: Builder Brief

        Quick facts: size on the table, how tricky it is, and any special notes. Good for getting ready.

        📐 Level 3: Detailed Plan

        Step‑by‑step modules (big chunks) and sub‑assemblies (small chunks). Do one chunk at a time—nice and calm.

        📰 Level 4: Share Text

        A friendly description you can post to show what you made. Optional, but fun.

        Fast Way to Read the Plan

        1
        Read the Snapshot to make sure it’s the thing you want to build.
        2
        Check the Brief for table space, difficulty, and any special parts.
        3
        Follow the Detailed Plan one module at a time. Do the quick checks after each module.
        4
        Use the Share Text if you want to show your build online.

        Are These Plans Really Real?

        Yes. Here’s how we make sure:

        • Real parts only: We stick to common LEGO elements (bricks, plates, tiles, Technic pins, hinges). No fantasy parts.
        • Smart structure: Layers overlap to lock together. Long plates bridge seams. Weak spots get extra support.
        • Stability checks: After each module you’ll see quick tests: squeeze gently, check wobble, make sure pins are fully in.
        • Clear names: Part groups are labeled (for example: “2×4 bricks”, “1×2 plates”, “Technic pin”). Easy to count, easy to find.
        • Color‑safe: Colors are flexible unless we mark them “structural.” You can swap to what you have.
        • Reality first: We avoid illegal connections and angles that stress parts.

        Parts List (BOM) — Simple Example

        Use this to gather pieces. Start with one module so your table stays tidy.

        Bricks & Plates — strong core
        • 2×4 bricks × 40
        • 2×2 bricks × 28
        • 1×4 plates × 24
        
        Connections & Support
        • Technic pins × 18
        • 2×2 corner plates × 10
        
        Details
        • 1×1 tiles × 30
        • Curved slopes × 12
            

        Tip: Put each module’s parts in its own little tray or bowl.

        Modules, Sub‑Assemblies & Quick Checks

        • ✅ Stability: squeeze corners—no wobble.
        • ⚠️ Alignment: studs line up; left and right match.
        • ✅ Connections: pins and hinges fully clicked.

        Catching a loose bit early saves time later.

        How the Pictures & Notes Help You

        • Top view shows the footprint and symmetry.
        • Isometric notes show how layers stack up.
        • Side notes warn about hinge limits and offsets.

        If Something Feels Off

        Colors don’t match mine

        That’s okay! Swap to close colors (light/dark gray families work great). Only keep colors the same if we say they’re structural.

        The build twists a little

        Add a plate layer across the joint or use a longer plate to bridge seams. Technic pins across a joint also help.

        A hinge won’t bend that far

        Check for tiles bumping into something. Move the hinge out by one stud or use a shorter span.

        Quick Questions

        What is “Real‑Build Mode”?

        It means the plan uses normal, buyable LEGO parts and safe, repeatable techniques. No pretend pieces.

        Do I have to copy the exact colors?

        No. Colors are for style unless we mark them structural. Use what you have and keep strong parts strong.

        Are these plans for beginners?

        Yes! Difficulty is marked. Start with “Easy,” go slow, and build one module at a time.

        TL;DR: These are real, sturdy plans with real parts. Read the Snapshot, prep with the Brief, build the modules, do the checks, and enjoy!