Lake House by terauma is the latest project to achieve 10,000 supporters on LEGO Ideas. The 2,900 piece build features a vacation home built on a small island. The project joins Cliffside House, Gravity Falls – The Mystery Shack, Round House Ski Lodge, Italian Villa, Summit Station, Betta Splendens, The Moon: Lunar Landscape, Overpass Park, Motorized Howl’s Moving Castle, The Discworld Unseen University Library, Clue – The Playable Mystery Game (AKA Cluedo), Bob Ross: Studio & Paintings, Woodland Wildlife, Sawmill, Gravity Falls Mystery Shack, Godzilla, Turing Machine – Working LEGO Computer, Portal 2: P-Body & Atlas, and From the Kitchen to Bricks: Linguini & Remy BrickHeadz, Magic Bookends, Science Lab Kit, Beetlejuice: Ghost House, Genshin Impact: Liyue Harbor Wharf, Camping Trip, Brandon Sanderson’s Cosmere, Bolex 16MM Camera, Springfield Elementary School Simpsons, Deep Rock Galactic Drilldozer, The Princess Bride – From Book to Blockbuster to Brick, The Eras of Taylor Swift, Polish...
Train Station – Wild West by llucky is the latest project to achieve 10,000 supporters on LEGO Ideas. The 2,845 piece build features a western train station along with a water tank with a small run of tracks. The project joins Cliffside House, Gravity Falls – The Mystery Shack, Round House Ski Lodge, Italian Villa, Summit Station, Betta Splendens, The Moon: Lunar Landscape, Overpass Park, Motorized Howl’s Moving Castle, The Discworld Unseen University Library, Clue – The Playable Mystery Game (AKA Cluedo), Bob Ross: Studio & Paintings, Woodland Wildlife, Sawmill, Gravity Falls Mystery Shack, Godzilla, Turing Machine – Working LEGO Computer, Portal 2: P-Body & Atlas, and From the Kitchen to Bricks: Linguini & Remy BrickHeadz, Magic Bookends, Science Lab Kit, Beetlejuice: Ghost House, Genshin Impact: Liyue Harbor Wharf, Camping Trip, Brandon Sanderson’s Cosmere, Bolex 16MM Camera, Springfield Elementary School Simpsons, Deep Rock Galactic Drilldozer, The Princess Bride – From Book...
It looks like we’ll be getting a Walmart exclusive LEGO set for The Fast and the Furious franchise next year. LEGO is still working with Tongal to produce some stop-motion videos. Although the details are confidential, it does say that the set will focus on a female character and features a fan favorite vehicle. LEGO is requesting two videos, one showing this new set and the other alongside the LEGO Speed Champions 2 Fast 2 Furious Nissan Skyline GT-R (R34). With the set having a female character, we can guess that it could be a representation of Letty Ortiz or just a generic female. If it is Letty, she has driven a number of cars throughout the franchise but the more memorable ones are the 1997 Nissan 240SX and 1993 Honda Civic EJ1 from the first movie. Another possibility could be Suki’s Honda S2000 from 2 Fast 2 Furious. The post...
Have you ever considered decorating a Christmas tree using only brick-built LEGO ornaments? With BrickNerd being a Recognized LEGO Fan Media (RLFM), we sometimes get to bring ideas like that into reality by leveraging support like the LEGO Pick-a-Brick support program. (You may remember such grand project ideas as building Mega Nerdly.) My idea for a support order this year was, you guessed it, to decorate an entire Christmas tree using LEGO ornaments. This tree would be donated and displayed at an annual fundraiser called the “Festival of Trees and Lights” here in Louisville, Kentucky (USA). The fundraiser supports Norton Children’s Hospital Foundation, whose mission is to: “… serve all families regardless of their ability to pay. As part of a not-for-profit organization, Norton Children’s facilities rely on the generosity of the community to help fulfill our mission to provide for the physical and emotional health of children, from birth to...
Today’s guest article comes from Warren Elsmore, a lifelong LEGO fan and professional brick artist based in Edinburgh, UK. You can find him on his website and Instagram. T-Gauge Trains Caution: Non-LEGO parts ahead! I suspect most of us have some sort of hobby aside from being an AFOL. For me, I’ve always had a bit of an interest in model railways. Not that I’ve had one since I was 8 – but I’ve always enjoyed watching them. I suspect that influenced the choice of my first MOC made as an adult – which was of a GNER east coast train here in the UK. One of the first AFOL friends I made, however, is based nearby in Scotland and is very much into LEGO trains. David Graham’s AFOL-ness (is that a word?) is a bit different, though, as he attends local model railway shows with his LEGO trains. Unlike all...