cheaper lego bricks

cheaper lego bricks

cheap vintage lego sets

Cheaper Lego Bricks

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LEGO… it’s a love/hate relationship. You love that those colorful little bricks get your master builders thinking outside the box, but the failed attempts to keep them all in one place is almost as painful as when you step on one… with bare feet… in the dark (Psst! The two are related!). That’s why we’ve gathered the most clever LEGO storage solutions we could find. From the ultimate table to hardware store hacks, there’s a fix for your brick explosion here. photo: Heidi Kundun via Happiness is Homemade Forget fancy organizing systems. Get yourself to the local DIY store, pick up a package of plastic bins and just like that, you’ll have an easily accessible solution to your kid’s brick collection. We love the way Heidi over at Happiness is Homemade used her err… block, when it comes to LEGO. Get the detailed list of what you’ll need here. Tackle the Tiny Stuff Ever notice that LEGO sets come with a bit more, well, stuff, than when you were a kid?




Using a tackle or jewelry-making box (snag one at your local crafting store) with tons of tiny compartments makes it easy to have a place for each little accessory: from food to sidekicks, tools and more. photo: B Inspired Mama The creative blogger at B-Inspired Mama uses vertical storage and wall space (instead of your kiddo’s bedroom floor!) with this fun way to store LEGOs. Using materials that are a cinch to grab from the hardware or discount store, label each bucket with a white paint marker and then sort, sort, sort! Get the how-to at B-Inspired Mama. photo: Kristin Gentry via Kojo Designs This incredible building/storage combo table looks a lot harder to recreate than it really is. Combine a trip to IKEA with the most sticky glue you can find and you’ll be on your way. Want to know what you’ll need? Skip on over to Kojo Designs for the how-to. LEGOs are something kids love all the way through up to middle school and beyond. When Michelle from That Mommy Blog was looking for a storage solution for her son’s exploding brick collection, she came up with this ingenious Adjustable Height DIY Lego Table and Storage Unit, which can be used forever!




We love the fact that Michelle covered one side of the shelf with green baseplates, and left the other smooth for the option of building without baseplates.  For the step-by-step instructions, visit That Mommy Blog. It’s a Type A’s dream. After listening to her boys say they wanted a color-coded sorting system, Jen of I Heart Organizing looked around and decided the IKEA Trofast system was the best way to go. Those nifty little labels are made with paper and Mod Podge. Get the full rundown over at I Heart Organizing. photo: Meredith Rowley via My 4 Misters & Their Sister Now that all the bricks have a place, find a spot for those building manuals, too. Believe us, once one of those suckers disappear, the chances of re-building that set are slim to none. We love the simple but brilliant idea from My 4 Misters & Their Sister. Even busy parents (meaning all of us!) can manage this one. Find out more over at My 4 Misters &Their Sister. photo: Abby Banks via 4 One More




If your LEGO-loving kid wants a way to proudly display his favorite minifigs, take notes from mom Abby over at 4 One More. She upcycled a few frames from the local thrift store, had her kids pick the paint colors and, with the help of one incredible tube of glue, made a super clever and chic way to store LEGOs. Get the details on how to make your own over at 4 One More. photo: HGTV / I-Beam Design Can you imagine the look in your little one’s eyes if you turned his or her bedroom into a wall-to-wall LEGO haven? Designers Lena Seow, Vrinda Khanna and Suzan Wines of I-Beam Design did just that. LEGO boards cover the walls of this room, from floor to ceiling, so kids can build with or against gravity. Plus, every creation becomes an integral part of the play space architecture until a new construction is made. How cool is that? Lay Out the LEGOs Designed by a mom and dad who needed a solution to cleaning, containing and controlling their kids’ LEGOs, this amazing bag acts an activity mat, cleanup, storage and carryall solution in one.




It comes in three sizes— a lite 18-inch, a larger 44-inch and a large 5-foot size. The smaller sizes work great for travel and bringing LEGOs to and from the bedroom and kitchen table. Bonus: You can wash it and it comes with a shoulder strap for easy transport. , $21.95 to $64.95. How do you organize your little builder’s LEGOs? We would love to hear your ideas. Leave us a comment below! — Kristina Moy & Gabby CullenIn 1998 the Lego Group entered into a licensing agreement with Lucasfilm, the company founded by "Star Wars" creator George Lucas. It allowed Lego to manufacture sets based on the movies, with instructions showing builders how to turn 2,000 tiny plastic bricks into the Death Star. Fourteen years later the Walt Disney Company bought Lucasfilm for $4 billion, with the licensing deal still very much in place. Countless Lego products tied in with the franchise followed, and the Lego Group went on to manufacture sets based on other popular movie franchises, such as "Harry Potter" and "The Avengers."




Licensing is part of an overall strategy that's made the Lego Group wildly successful. According to its 2015 annual report, Lego Group made $1.4 billion in net profit, more than double what it made just four years earlier. But while this is good news for Lego, it's created a tough situation for some consumers. The Lego Group still creates sets priced well within the modest reach of a child's allowance, but parents who have taken their kids to the toy store know perfectly well that there is no appetite for a 30-piece set that can be built in five minutes. Kids want one of the high-end sets with thousands of pieces, and those can retail for hundreds of dollars. If that were a one-time expense, parents might be willing to make an exception, but it rarely is. Often, the child will just want another set seconds after finishing the last one and putting it on the shelf to be forever ignored. If the parent relents and buys another such set in the same month, the expense can become equal to that of a car lease payment.




Luckily, parents of Lego-obsessed youngsters can breathe a sigh of relief. Netbricks, a company based in Elk Grove Village, Illinois, offers the opportunity to rent Lego sets for a monthly fee. There are several tiers, such as the Master plan, which allows 60-day rentals of $400 worth of Lego sets for $49 a month. At the end of the 60-day period, the sets are shipped back free of charge and new sets are shipped to the subscriber. Company president Rick Weil founded it after experiencing the same thing that so many other parents do. In other words, he was hemorrhaging money on Legos for his kids and wondered if there was a way to slow the bleeding. "It seemed like a problem that a lot of people had," he said. "I figured if there's a big enough problem, then there's probably a market there. Licensing adds a fair amount to the price of a set, and the expense of the product lent itself to the rental business." Netbricks started selling to the public in 2015 and at launch a Groupon promotion led to an initial enroll of 5,000 people, far outpacing expectations.




He said that requests for the now-discontinued Death Star set accounted for fully 12 percent of his initial customer requests, with the $240 Tower Bridge set taking second place. "These are people who buy at a lower price point," he said. "Something like the Death Star is a once-a-year purchase for these families." (Pictured: The world-famous Tower Bridge features iconic towers, working drawbridge and a red double-decker bus. It also includes 4,295 pieces and costs $240.) Netbricks currently employs eight people, including Weil. Each employee has a dedicated job, right down to the person who does the all-important cleaning of the returned sets, using a medical-grade technique that's absolutely necessary for anyone who considers the term "used Legos." Weil said that parents are actually far less concerned about cooties than they are about penalty fees for lost pieces. Netbricks assesses no charge for those. "Part of our service is no charge for normal piece loss," Weil said, citing a range of 15 to 20 lost pieces for regular sets or 20 to 30 for larger ones.




He added that the company's real concern is the malicious actor who "harvests" Lego sets with the intention of selling rare pieces to desperate builders who need that special brick to finish their creation. Weil would not disclose his company's financial information, but he said that it's profitable on a gross margin basis, and he expects it to be cash-flow positive in six months' time. He added that he's in no rush to see the company get ahead of itself by expanding too quickly. "We made a decision early on that although there's more demand out there that we can get, we didn't want to take on a huge volume of customers until operations are ready to scale," he said. "If you don't have customer service and structure where you can field all calls, that's not a great way to grow a business." Netbricks currently boasts 215 "fully active" members, which it defines as members who have rented and returned sets for more than one cycle. The current total is well below the 5,000 customers who signed up at launch, but Weil said that was to be expected because of the one-time impact of the Groupon promotion.




The lower number of repeat customers is a more accurate reflection of Lego diehards. And Weil said that Netbricks has been successful in retaining repeat customers, so they must be doing something right. , because Lego is trying to discourage resellers. Netbricks buys its entire inventory from retailers (Walmart, Target, Toys-R-Us, etc.). "Lego is aware of what we're doing and we've had a handful of communications with them," Weil said. "It was nothing atypical of how a top five worldwide brand would work to protect their brand and trademark. Anytime anybody pops up and is using the word 'Lego' in a commercial sense, the Lego company sends out information and notification as to how they would like you to use their trademarks, and that's been the extent of our business to business communication with Lego." Lego Group could not provide a comment by press time. "We're focused on providing an experience for big-time Lego fans. We have a lot of respect for the Lego company and their retail model," Weil said.

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