star destroyer

Matheson Harris has amassed an impressive collection of Star Wars spaceships including the Millennium Falcon, Star Destroyer, Tie Fighter and even an AT-AT – the most interesting part however, is that they were all fashioned from cardboard. As impressive as the works are, Matheson takes an understated approach:

Hot glue, cardboard, sharpie, a few sucker sticks and ping pong balls = garbage armada

Check out an additional image after the break.

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There are LEGO sculpts, and then there are LEGO SCULPTS. This Star Wars Venator Class Star Destroyer falls into the latter category. Let’s start with the size. This ship is 8 feet long. Rather than being built on a frame of foam or wood, this build is entirely made from LEGO bricks—43,000 pieces in all. Because of that, it weighs 180 pounds. I think creator Erik Varszegi is going to need Yoda’s help to lift the Star Destroyer if it ever needs moved in one piece.

Check out a video tour of the Star Destroyer as well as photos of the monumental ship after the break.

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The 8-pound, 3152-piece flagship Exceutor Star Destroyer is dropping on Lego fans this fall! It will measure a whopping 50-inches long—making it the longest Lego model to date.

The Executor will certainly live up to its name in terns of you bank account when it drops for $400 on September 1st. Check out an additional image after the break.

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The Wicked Audio ice luge may be the longest ever, but the Star Destroyer version might be the nerdiest ever—and we all know geekness matters more than length.

Read more on That’s Nerdalicious

For only $1995 you can buy one of these framed christening plates from the bulkhead of a Star Wars Imperial Star Destroyer.

This extraordinary SpecPlate is based off the commemorative christening plates that would have been affixed to the bulkhead of Imperial Star Destroyers. Measuring 36-inches wide x 17-inches tall (43-inches wide x 24-inches tall, framed), and features 1/8-inch aluminum designed by Naval architects in Seattle. Mounted with 2-inch polished stainless steel standoffs on a supporting plate in a shadow box frame, this incredible work of art is limited to just 25 pieces worldwide.

Of course, at that price you may need to save a bit of money on the Champagne and christen your ship with a bottle of Thunderbird.

Product Page ($1995)