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Buy Lego Road Base Plates

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LEGO 30282 and 30279 BASE PLATE Lot CROSS ROAD CITY GRAY with GRASST-Junction & Curved Road Platesproduct_label_list_price_accessibility 38 Reviews123451FIND MORE PRODUCTS LIKE THISCityRoads for your LEGO® layout! T-Junction & Curved Road Plates Reviews - page 2 All New Bright Colors You have never seen so many options! Besides all your favorites, Slab Dream Lab has all new colors for a classic building foundation. Our baseplate Slabs come in bigger and better sizes to expand your play area. Or make room for more friends. Bring Your Imagination to Life Choose themes that match your favorite minifig, cityscape or MOC. With Slab Dream Lab, the possibilities are endless. Classic Green Baseplate (12x12)Straight & Crossroad Platesproduct_label_list_price_accessibility 76 Reviews123451FIND MORE PRODUCTS LIKE THISCityAdd roads to your LEGO® town! Straight & Crossroad Plates Reviews - page 2Items 1 to 60 of 224 Items 1 to 60 of 224LEGO & DUPLO BaseplatesLarge Baseplates




LEGO & DUPLO Compatible All of our baseplates are compatible with LEGO bricks & DUPLO blocks Exclusive HUGE sizes means more kids can play at once, encouraging sharing and team teamwork (& less arguments) Cheap Baseplates for Families Made from quality products and compatible with leading brands at an affordable price. BRAND NEW Silicone Baseplate Sensory benefits, flexible to roll up and take away with you, doubled sided to fit LEGO & DUPLO & premium silicone to last a lifetime Welcome to The Wacky Warehouse Thank you for visiting our corner of the internet, anything we can do to help you out, please let us know. We aim to provide only the very best quality LEGO & DUPLO compatible baseplates and accessories to aid your creative building genius. Whether you are 3 or 93, we are sure to have something to help make your building more creative. We have a variety of colours, sizes and textures, all at affordable prices and provide some cool alternatives to LEGO baseplates – aswell as the original thing.




We are a small UK based company and pride ourselves on our customer support, so feel free to ask us any questions.FIND MORE PRODUCTS LIKE THIS & FREE Delivery in the UK on orders over £20.00. Discover top brands: LEGO, Playmobil, Barbie, NERF, Sylvanian Families and more. LEGO City 7281: Curve & T-JunctionDetailsLEGO 4 x Traffic Lights For City Town Road Street Modular LEGO 4 x Black Street Light Lamps Post Yellow Light Post CITY Product Dimensions25.5 x 25.5 x 0.7 cm Manufacturer recommended age:5 - 12 years Main Language(s)Italian manual, German manual, French manual, English manual, Spanish manual Number of Puzzle Pieces2 6,373 in Toys & Games (See top 100) Date First Available1 Jan. 2006 Add a T-junction and curved roads to your LEGO town with this set of building plates. Includes one T-junction plate and one curved road plate. 1 x T-junction plate1 x curved road plate LEGO 4 x Black Street Light Lamps Post Yellow Light Post CITY




See all 160 customer reviews See all 160 customer reviews (newest first) Most Recent Customer Reviews Great service highly recommended My wee grandson loves this. It actually comes in two parts but that makes no difference to the fun.The usual good quality lego. perfect for my son Great Add-on to keep the kids entertained, whilst also adding to their Lego collection... Bought for grandson (4yrs) for Christmas. Arrived before expected date. Really pleased and was a reasonable price. The original and best! The usual high Lego standard of manufacture. I bought some of these to make a Lego table (of 4x3 bases) for our granddaughter. Home & Garden > Home & Garden(Written by Geneva – gid617) In this series we will be going over a few basic LEGO techniques and ideas for building a good LEGO MOC (My-Own-Creation). I’ll be taking examples from several LEGO builders to give you a good idea of different styles and possibilities of the techniques covered.




Unless otherwise specified however, the examples used here are mine. So let’s start at the foundation of most LEGO creations; the base and border! For many LEGO creations the base is the first thing that needs to be built. Of course sometimes one builds a LEGO vehicle or something that doesn’t need a base. And even if you do build a base, you may start out with some of the little details and then expand around that. But wherever you start the fact remains that for most LEGO creations a base is a key component. And the most important part of a base is that it is stable, and capable of supporting the entire MOC. The last thing you want is for your LEGO creation to fall apart the moment you move it! Fortunately there are several ways of making a sturdy foundation – each of them particularly suited for a certain style or genre of LEGO building. We’ll start with the most obvious one; using a LEGO baseplate, then move on to more advanced techniques. ➡ – LEGO baseplates can significantly cut down on the amount of time it takes to build a base for your LEGO model, as they are specifically meant to provide a foundation for your LEGO creations. P




ay attention to the color of the baseplate you are using though. For example, if you are using tan elements to look like sand on a green baseplate, the edges will end up looking like the sand is growing out of the grass! Nelow is an example of the unsightly green line I’m referring to. The overall MOC would have been much improved without it. To avoid this syndrome, and if you can’t find the right color baseplate, you can attach regular LEGO plates at the edge of the baseplate – overhanging by 1 or 2 studs – and making the baseplate pretty much invisible. But this does mean that the entire base will have to go up at least a plate-height on every side, which could hamper your overall design. And of course this also means that there’s really not much reason to use a LEGO baseplate as opposed to some other method. ➡ – Another option for making a LEGO base is to use a grid formation, generally with something like 6-8 studs between lines. This works especially well if you want to cover an entire area with a color you don’t have baseplates for. A




grid also ties in well with a border around your LEGO creation. The key is to use a color you won’t need in the rest of your model (unless you have a very large LEGO collection). I generally use red and yellow, because I have quite a few of each, and rarely use them for other purposes. Though a grid can be unstable at first, after adding plates and landscaping on top it is usually very sturdy! Below is an example of a LEGO creation on a grid-base: ➡ – Yet another possibility for your LEGO model is an irregular base. This is a base made out of LEGO wedge-plates arranged in a non-symmetric formation. While not quite suitable for a building (in my opinion at least), it works very well in a landscape-focused model. Legonardo is quite the master at this, and the example below is one of his works, but there are several other excellent LEGO creations that utilize the same technique; among them Gideon’s fantastic The Dune Sea, Blake Baericks’ amazing Swiss Family Robinson, Yacapo’s neat little Stranded…, .B




ricko’s funny The truth is…, and Masa of Kaliphlin’s cute The Pretzel Thief. ➡ – Another great LEGO base technique is SNOT (Studs-Not-On-Top), or sideways building. One way to do this is in a rectangular shape, but it also has a very nice effect when done with slopes and inverted slopes. The slope-method gives a nice combination of smoothness and angles that works well especially for snowy MOCs. Like the irregular base, slopes work best in landscape settings (rock, water, grass, snow), rather than in the middle of a town. A few examples of both types of SNOT bases are Yacapo’s Winter Traveler (slope), Si-MOC’s 40-Love (rectangular), Sirens-of-Titan’s Erebus Gate (slope), and Mark of Falworth’s A Struggle in the Swamp (rectangular).  The example below is one I built myself. ➡ ROUND LEGO BASE – Making a round LEGO base is a challenge in and of itself, and one that isn’t attempted too frequently. Both the above mentioned irregular and SNOT techniques are useful for this, but Brick-Bending (see an article on Brick-Bending here) also works well for large MOCs, as is the case with Blake Baericks’ Ice Age: The Meltdown. F




or smaller LEGO vignettes, using a tire is quite a creative idea, as in K.Kreations’ New Mushrooms. Below is ‘LL’s creation called Visit, also an excellent example of a round based MOC. Of course there are plenty of other ways to make a base for your LEGO model, but I hope the above examples get your creative juices going! So now you’ve got lots of examples of a good LEGO base, but what about a border? Not all bases need borders – fortunately – but a border can give a LEGO creation a professional finish that a simple baseplate foundation can’t really provide. Borders can be elaborate SNOT work, or something as simple as a layer of black bricks and tiles. An example of a simple black border is Sir Edwin’s Revamping the Ruins, or cmaddison’s The Invasion of Denas Brenhinol. And a few SNOT examples are ZCerberus‘ Marecroft Manor, Masa of Kaliphlin’s Okatowan Gardens, and Ecclesiastes’ Encounter.  Below is a very original LEGO border example by eilonwy77. So what do you think? W

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