Archive for the 'Uncategorized' Category

Gun-Slinging Legos

Thursday, April 8th, 2010

If you want some gun-slinging action in Legoland, better get some horses and a few cowboys to accompany you in your adventures.  Cowboy Legomen have been riding on horseback in the Wild West of Legolandia for decades. If you do not have a cowboy town worthy of the Old West just yet, you should browse among LEGO’s cowboy sets such as Frontier Patrol where you can get your very own cavalry soldier wearing a bandana. No need to follow Paula Cole’s lyrics in Where Have All the Cowboys Gone anymore because finally you will have your own Old West set.

Photo Courtesy of CustomMinifig.co.uk

If you want a showdown, you should also include Sheriff’s Showdown in your list. This collection is where you get to have a sheriff and an outlaw along with a horse and a few other things you would usually see in the desert.  You may also want to include a covered wagon set for your Old West merchants. And you would also need a cell for the outlaws which means you’d need one of LEGO’s Sheriff’s Lock Up collection.

Get Bandit’s Secret Hideout so  you can have a headquarters for your criminals. Place this set in the outskirts of town so that the sheriff and his men will not be able to find it.

Build Fort Legoredo, a 673 piece Lego collection with 10 Legomen. This is one of the most coveted items of all because the fort is massive in Lego proportions and real fun to play with.

Do not forget your Bandit with a Gun set so you can finally have a chase between the most dangerous outlaw and your sheriff.  Now won’t that be exciting?

For parents whose kids want a Cowboy Lego set, go ahead and buy your kids what they want, it will help hone their minds and nourish their creativity.

Lego and Children

Wednesday, April 7th, 2010

Photo Courtesy of LittleArtist.co.uk


Here’s some food for thought: children are birthed in this world with creativity attached at their hips. It’s the singular inherent force that connects us to the primordial life source – the strand that links us to the universe and makes us one with it.

And LEGO blocks? They’re creativity’s first conduit, the bridge between our physical senses and the universe, something that gives us a taste of imagination actualized…It’s the toy that’s so much more.

See, exactly because they’re toys, humans interact with them in the earliest stages of consciousness. When kids play with LEGO blocks, their creativity develops and may result to them being architects, engineers or whatever they want to be. That’s what makes them awesome.

But it doesn’t end there. These technological marvels are also highly affordable, easy to use, baby-proofed, kid-friendly, environmentally safe, indestructible and, not to mention, timeless. Children of all ages can create with them, even those kids whose souls stayed young but whose bodies grew old.

They’re even considered art! Last August 2005, two artists by the names of Darren Neave and John Cake (also known as the Little Artists) held an exhibition called Art Craziest Nation in Liverpool Museum using nothing more than pure unadulterated LEGO blocks, a few other materials and their wits. Their fierce socio-historical commentaries were subdued in tones by the use of pop iconic figures like Pokemon and, of course, LEGO products, but their rage against commercialization is nonetheless intact, albeit displayed in simplistic blazing hues. These showed that not only do LEGO products play a huge role in creativity but in education and social mores as well.

And if that’s not enough, note the fact that it enforces a stimulating atmosphere where a multitude of stories are born each time they are used, and that it brings people closer, from fathers and sons building model LEGO Planes together, to grandparents and their grandkids shaping LEGO Nations while teaching each other values and experiences the other would always benefit in remembering.

A final note: Although mainly targeted for kids, LEGO products have also helped adults through all the years of its existence; when hobbyists collect LEGO toys and slowly build towards bringing their fantasies, their ideals and their desires into a miniaturized reality, they have an outlet in releasing their frustrations and their bottled up creativity, making it a therapeutic activity not just for their body but for their souls as well. The difference between a LEGO hobby from other hobbies is that this is a hobby even children can do, and therefore it can be a lifetime project. Add the fact that LEGO blocks cannot be worn out by excessive usage or by time, and you get a hobby that has the potential to transcend generations without fear of getting shattered or broken – an unbreakable, immortal heirloom.

To the brilliant makers of LEGO: Cheers!

Those Legoless Years

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

Adults who played with Lego as kids have now forgotten how to go about the blocks when they are building with their own chidlren. This creativity can wane after a few “Legoless” years but can be regained if you practice everyday. You would notice that your kids are actually doing better than you are but don’t fret, you can always take a look at the instructions. If however you bought a pail of Lego blocks and your son or daughter wants you to build a castle without a blueprint, then you would probably need to look for instructions online or you can take a look at one of our old How-To articles and learn how to build a Lego Castle.

Regaining your Lego-building prowess may take some time but as the adage goes, patience is a virtue and you should be very patient when building with your child even if he or she is a much better builder than you are. Master Lego brick building again by spending an hour a day to play with your kids, apart from learning how to build again you will also be building your relationship with your children. you might even get a “The World’s Best Dad”  or “The World’s Best Mom” mug for Christmas. Now that’s not bad.

Those Legoless years where all of us are busy with school and work and building our families is time well-spent of course but now that we all have the time to play with old toys when we were kids with our own children, we should make the most out of it.

Many hands-on moms and dads build with their kids and this is truly a great way to bond as a family. As a Lego enthusiast said in a blog “A family that builds together, stays together”  or maybe they build a great bond so to speak.

Chinese Lego

Thursday, March 25th, 2010

Photo Courtesy of SquintyEyes

The Chinese are now so successful in terms of economy –they have products shipped to all parts of the world, do all sorts of trading with different countries and are by far the fastest growing economy in Asia today. From Africa to its neighboring countries, the words “Made in China” can be found. Chinese Legomen can also be found in the world of Lego and they have small eyes as well. These Chinese Lego people were not made in China though, they are just custom figures made by Chinese Lego fans.

The colors of these figures were no longer changed because Lego minifigs have always been yellow anyway so it’s just fitting for the Chinese Lego folks. A rather cute creation is done by Lego builder named “squintyeyes”. The photo of a Lego Chinese gas man on his bicycle is just so accurate that it would make you smile and might even make your eyes as squinty as the custom Lego minifig. Gas men in Hong Kong usually ride a bike to deliver gas, making the creation very accurate and apt. Children should see this photo because for one, they will learn that things are so different on the other side of the globe.

Kuromi another builder built 4 Chinese historical figures. Whoever these guys are, they sure do look Chinese and look rather heroic as well. It’s possible that one of the minifigs is Genghis Khan. The guy on the lower right side might be an emperor from the Han Dynasty but this is only based on observation because the creator of these little figures did not label his creations. If you can’t see the photo you may check it out at Kuromi’s blog.

Kuromi also made other minifigs based on historical characters. These characters include Englishmen and other Westerners.

Photo Courtesy of Bored-Bored

If you really want a Lego Chinese experience, Lego Beijing is a place you should visit. The place however can be a little outdated already because the theme of the Legotown is Lego Beijing Olympics. The creation however is very cool and it was made by a team from Lego.

Daren Smith and the Brickish Association

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

34 year old Darren Smith has the biggest private collection of the little coloured bricks in the world. The British collector started collecting Lego bricks when he was 5 years old. What started as a Christmas present became a fascination and the boy decided to collect the blocks all his life. The entire collection is 2 million bricks now and it is worth over $92, 800. His favorites are Lego Star Wars apart from his collection of astronauts, cowboys, police and superheroes.

His wife Claire does not mind him collecting all the Lego he wants as long as he keeps them in their garage. But as they started spreading all over their house, she started to get mad as well but there is just no stopping the British collector. He orders all the new Lego toys and said that he wants them all.

When Darren turned 27 he joined the adult Lego Club “Brickish Association” a UK-based community interested in anything Lego. The association has its very own newsletter and it is called “The Brick Issue” written by members of the Brickish Association for its members.

If you are in the UK and is a Lego aficionado but is not yet a member of the association, you should join the community today. When you’re a member you will get a subscription to the community’s newsletter, access their website and the opportunity to join events organized by members both in the United Kingdom and abroad.

The aims of the association is to provide a forum for adult Lego fans within the UK and to make it known that there are lots of adults who still love and will keep on loving the coloured bricks. The Brickish Association also organize shows for the general public and of course for its Lego-loving members.


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