Winter Village: Woodcraft Shoppe


Winter Village: Woodcraft Shoppe
Originally uploaded by LegoMyMamma

Clarifying Friends place in the LEGO world

 My copious reply to a comment on an article on which a person asks for clarification, due to the commenter not owning any Friends sets of their own -- to evaluate first-person -- yet relying on some images online, which appear to show Friends as over-sized/pre-built:

"While I don't know which pictures online you looked at (there are a lot of distorted images & data regarding Friends) I can tell you the bricks are System bricks (meaning *not* DUPLO) but in fact, the same type/size which exist in *all* other LEGO sets and brick buckets.  I own several Friends sets, so this isn't me merely reading it somewhere.

What is sadly being over-shadowed by this myopic "backlash" is how innovative this theme is, in relation to overall LEGO products.  If you watched the robotic sorting machine in the LEGO factory on National Geographic channel this weekend, you would have a glimpse into the mind-boggling, complex packaging process for these sets.  The current trend in building structures has gone toward what it called "modular" -- which *does not* mean pre-fab, yet, each 'section' is build brick-by-brick and 'then' can be combined in several different configurations.  The most well-known modular LEGO set is the Grand Emporium http://shop.lego.com/en-US/Grand-Emporium-10211

Olivia's house was designed and packaged the same way.  Rather than randomly dumping all the bricks into a bag into the set box, groupings of individual bricks are sorted into various bags -- so the owner can *choose* to build one specific section of the house -- *brick-by-brick* -- and/or continue on building the entire house in one sitting.  Due to the anthropological research TLG garnered, being able to "build" with a several bricks -- along *with* imagination play -- is offered for the purpose of keeping some girl builders attention long enough to continue interest in building.  In today's busy lifestyles, this may also be a practical application; building the entire house in one sitting takes even experienced adult builders a couple of hours.  Also, the modules are meant to be rearranged to owner's taste.  Also, the owner can re-build the entire house into something completely different.  What you may think of as "limiting" by TLG producing sets, most LEGO fans thrive on because it is a chance to obtain new colors and pieces.  Also, since Olivia's house is LARGE, so for *stability* purposes, there are a few 1x5 bricks -- which are the *same size* as found in Harry Potter, Indiana Jones, and several other sets!

Please take time to answer your questions visually with this meticulously photographed, detailed review of Olivia's House  -- for a much better understanding of the actual build and the way it's packaged, plus, it is written by a female, Pandora: http://www.eurobricks.com/forum/index.php?showtopic=64270
It is *very* long, as it is a large set (695 separate pieces) and it provides analogy of this set in relation to other sets of equal degree in building challenge.  Pandora has added in a nice mini-doll analysis in comparison to the traditional MiniFig :-)

The kids who build Friends (kids = boys who also appreciate real-life settings) will definitely build spatial, math, and engineering skills while engaged in play!"



"Build Yours"


Nice, whimsical print work from Pereira & O'Dell for that most classic of toys, the LEGO block. A series of print ads that appeared on four consecutive pages show a LEGO brick, accompanied by an imaginative scenario, much what kids (and okay, adults) see when they look at a brick. The shop used kerning typography contrasted with tracking to get the reader more involved in the copy. The fourth ad, seen on the bottom right, featured a yellow brick with blank, notepad lines, with the tagline -- "Build Yours."

I have put them in reverse order, to share the blank template first.

and


 and



Olivia's SteamPunkopter


Olivia's SteamPunkopter
Originally uploaded by LegoMyMamma

Welcome Friends, to the wonderful world of fantastical flying machines!

Welcome to Olivia's woodshop


Welcome to Olivia's woodshop
Originally uploaded by LegoMyMamma

New Club magazine!


For girls!
Originally uploaded by hmillington


After years of LEGO fans asking for more focus on including girls in activities, products, and digital experience, The LEGO Group delivers!  Now girls can choose to receive the new club magazine for girls, with pictures of real girls sharing their creations, building tips, and other related activities.


LEGO 2012 Female Park Ranger!

 I'd like to dedicate this to Margaret Anderson -- a real life hero who gave her life while on duty protecting park visitors as a Park Ranger:  http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2017202331_rangermemorial11m.html

Fans of LEGO who would like to show their dedication and support with others, visit: Park Ranger MiniFig

This MiniFig can be found in Forest Police Station: http://shop.lego.com/en-US/Forest-Police-Station-4440