Famous Lego figures have taken on the faces of many famous characters, from Harry Potter to Star Wars characters, and now they will become popular Disney characters such as Mickey Mouse, Pluto, Buzz Lightyear, Ariel the Mermaid, Aladdin's Genie, Captain Hook, Racman Jack and Robin Hood.
Lego
Yes, you read that right, here's a Lego caravan built by Bright Bricks to celebrate 130 years of caravan holidays. The project, which entered the Guinness Book of Records as the largest trailer made of Lego blocks in the world, involved 12 creative people who spent more than 12 weeks to assemble what they envisioned from 215,158 bricks.
Lego bricks are timeless toys and there is probably no one among you who has not encountered them in their childhood. Therefore, it is not surprising that on average every person in the world has as many as 86 bricks at home, nor is it that Lego is the biggest rubber. And if you put these cubes one after the other, just with the number of cubes sold in 2012, you would circle the face of the Earth 18 times with them! You can read more interesting facts about Lego bricks in numbers below.
Even for such an avid Lego master, building a skyscraper from a generic set of bricks would be quite the challenge. Fortunately, Lego has introduced a new set of bricks of the "Architecture" series - the Skyline collection, with which you will be able to recreate the world's most famous architectural landmarks. For now, you can test your creative streak in the buildings of Venice, New York and Berlin.
The Ferrari F40 replica made of Lego bricks was created as a tribute to the last Ferrari model, which was fired by its founder Enzo Ferrari. It is one of the most legendary sports vehicles, which entered the history of motoring with golden letters as early as 1987. And just as Lego bricks are timeless toys, the F40 model is also timeless and still turns heads almost 30 years later. Therefore, one made of Lego bricks that you can assemble yourself is a logical consequence of both mentioned facts.
EverBlock offers a modular building system that can be implemented with the help of large plastic blocks and thus quickly and easily build all kinds of objects or objects, of different colors and sizes.
Just when you thought Legos couldn't get any better, along comes Grant Thomson aka "King of Random" with a recipe for edible homemade gummies shaped like Legos that you can play with and build with. Watch the video to learn everything you need to do to turn this popular toy into candy. Who says food isn't a toy?
Lego bricks are more than a toy. Not only because they are timeless, but because they can also be used outside the children's room. And since there probably isn't a child in the last few generations who didn't own at least a few pieces of one of the most popular toys in the world during their childhood, there is a high probability - if you haven't handed them all down to the younger generations in good condition - that you have many dice lying around somewhere. But why collect dust on them when you can extend their life in a modified form. Here are some brilliant ideas on how to use Lego bricks.
Lego bricks have long outgrown the notion of a toy, and the Lego X project by the London studio Gravity is new proof that they can serve for much more than "just" to distract children cleverly. Namely, they developed hardware that allows a computer to track the position of individual cubes and thus simultaneously create a digital copy of the physical model.
Kocke Club, which was founded with the aim of bringing together all lovers of LEGO bricks in one place, will this year organize the 13th KockeFest - autumn 2014 - a LEGO playhouse and an exhibition of LEGO creations. The event will last two days at Koseze Primary School in Ljubljana.
Lego has built a mighty empire with the help of bricks since 1949 and is today the best-selling toy brand, even ahead of Mattel, which built its name around Barbie. The credit for the switch at the top goes to the animated Lego movie, with which Lego "outplayed" Mattel for the first time. But if Barbies and Kens are reserved for children, the age limit for Lego is drawn in the sand, so it's no wonder that the blocks are also found outside children's rooms.
If you have ever read the declaration on the packaging of Lego bricks, then you know that they should not be swallowed. Well, you certainly won't find that on the packaging of illustrator and designer Akihiro Mizuuchi's Lego bricks, as he designed a modular system for making chocolates. And the chocolate version is clearly edible, but since it looks so identical to the plastic version, check if you have the right one before eating.