new lego set 2013

new lego set 2013

new lego movie when does it come out

New Lego Set 2013

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FLL Challenge 2013 Nature's Fury Our community, 56 want it Our community, 4935 want it Our community, 2942 want it Our community, 3170 want it Our community, 3029 want it Our community, 5577 want it Our community, 3552 want it Red Five X-wing Starfighter Our community, 4494 want it Year of the Snake Our community, 607 want it Our community, 63 want it Our community, 88 want it Our community, 108 want it Our community, 65 want it Our community, 74 want it Our community, 113 want it Our community, 161 want it My First Train Set Our community, 130 want it Our community, 184 want it Our community, 69 want it Our community, 66 want it Our community, 83 want it Our community, 60 want it Our community, 78 want it Jake's Pirate Ship Bucky Our community, 95 want it Our community, 94 want itYears with an article: 1891 • 1895 • 1904 • 1916 • 1920 • 1924 • 1932 • 1934 • 1935 • 1936 • 1937 • 1940 • 1942 • 1946 • 1947 • 1948 • 1949 1950 • 1951 • 1953 • 1954 • 1955 • 1956 • 1957 • 1958 • 1959 • 1960 • 1961 • 1962 • 1963 • 1964 • 1965 • 1966 • 1967 • 1968 1969 • 1970 • 1971 • 1972 • 1973 • 1974 • 1975 • 1976 • 1977 • 1978 • 1979 • 1980 • 1981 • 1982 • 1983 • 1984 • 1985 • 1986 • 1987 1988 • 1989 • 1990 • 1991 • 1992 • 1993 • 1994 • 1995 • 1996 • 1997 • 1998 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001 • 2002 • 2003 • 2004 • 2005 • 2006 2007 • 2008 • 2009 • 2010 • 2011 • 2012 • 2013 •




2014 • 2015 • 2016 • 2017 • 2018 • 2019 • 2022 • 2030 This article or section is incomplete.Please improve the article, or discuss the issue on the talk page.Our community, 5577 want it Brickmaster Star Wars: Battle for the Stolen Crystals parts Our community, 527 want it Our community, 806 want it Our community, 931 want it Our community, 996 want it Our community, 869 want it Our community, 729 want it Star Wars Value Pack Our community, 427 want it LEGO Star Wars Super Pack Our community, 578 want it Clone Troopers vs. Droidekas Our community, 1701 want it Republic Troopers vs. Sith Troopers Our community, 1588 want it Our community, 143 want it Our community, 748 want it Our community, 713 want it Our community, 582 want it Our community, 1508 want it Our community, 693 want it Our community, 883 want it Our community, 964 want it Our community, 1281 want it




Our community, 1445 want it Our community, 1838 want it Our community, 1348 want it Our community, 771 want it Our community, 1383 want it Our community, 2183 want it Our community, 1929 want it Our community, 1576 want it Our community, 923 want it Coast Guard 4x4 & Diving Boat Our community, 1100 want it Are you sure you want to log out of LEGO Ideas? Announcing the Next LEGO Ideas Set, and Winter 2014 LEGO Review Results Yup, you’ve got it! This is the results of the Winter 2014 LEGO® Review. Six projects from the Winter Review and one still under consideration from the Fall 2013 LEGO Review have been considered from every angle.  Here’s what we have decided: LEGO Ideas #008: Research Institute We’re very excited to release Ellen Kooijman’s Female Minifigure set, featuring 3 scientists, now entitled “Research Institute” as our next LEGO Ideas set. This awesome model is an inspiring set that offers a lot for kids as well as adults.




The final design, pricing and availability are still being worked out, but it’s on track to be released August 2014, so keep an eye out! All other projects from the Winter 2014 Review periods will not be produced The LEGO Review Board has evaluated each project according to our decision criteria. We’ve decided that all other concepts in the winter 2014 review period will unfortunately not be produced as LEGO sets. This decision, however, does in no way take away from the incredible talent put into these projects or the passion supporters have shown. How do we make these decisions? Getting 10,000 votes for on a project is a huge accomplishment in and of itself. But it is really just the beginning of the project’s journey, because the 10,000 supporter milestone means the project enters the LEGO Review Stage. During the LEGO Review, a team of specialists within The LEGO Group – including LEGO set designers, marketing and business representatives, and other relevant team members – investigate and evaluate the project to determine its potential as a LEGO set.




This involves analyzing the votes and information you give us about your project as well as looking at things like playability, safety, and fit within the LEGO brand. This takes a while and the timing varies because of all the different factors involved in the decision process. Every potential LEGO product, including those developed internally, goes through a process like this and must meet the same standards. The LEGO Review Board makes all final decisions on which new sets the LEGO Group will release based on LEGO Ideas projects. First 2014 LEGO Review Results Coming Late Summer/Early Fall-2014 The first 2014 LEGO Review is well underway, and you can expect results late summer/early fall. Remember we have updated our review schedule to three times per year.  We’re very excited about bringing you the Research Institute set and look forward to considering more of the amazing projects reaching 10,000 supporters and thereby qualifying for the LEGO Review. From LEGO CUUSOO to LEGO Ideas




As you may have noticed, LEGO CUUSOO changed its name to LEGO Ideas. But the name is not the only change! We introduced a new and improved website, complete with responsive design and the possibility of embedding videos into your project. We’ve also changed a few rules… For instance project creators now can be 13+ rather than 18+. We’re excited to see what the younger audience will bring of fresh new ideas and great builds. Also, a project is now only given year to reach 10,000 supporters.  This means that you (yes, you) need to start campaigning in order to make the deadline. We hope you are as excited about the new LEGO Ideas as we are. And while we know that some transition time is required, we know that LEGO Ideas will be an even better community with more amazing projects than before! As the sun sets slowly in the west, we wish you happy building!Architecture Studio, a new set from Lego, comes with 1,210 white and translucent bricks. More notable is what it lacks: namely, instructions for any single thing you’re supposed to build with it.




Instead, the kit is accompanied by a thick, 277-page guidebook filled with architectural concepts and building techniques alongside real world insights from prominent architecture studios from around the globe. In other words, this box o’ bricks is a little different. Where past Lego products might have had the happy ancillary effect of nurturing youngsters’ interest in architecture, here, that’s the entire point. Seventy-three different kinds of bricks are included in the set. But bricks are easy to find. It’s the guidebook that’s truly new. Its pages offer accessible overviews of basic architectural concepts, along with illustrated exercises for exploring them in Lego form. Pages on negative space and interior sections, for example, encourage budding builders to think not only about how their miniature creations look from the outside but also in terms of what sorts of spaces they contain within them. That, admittedly, is a bit headier than snapping together a castle for a smiling minifig army.




And the set does come with a recommendation of ages 16 and up. But if Lego products have proven anything over the years, it’s that with simple tools, young kids can prove to be surprisingly proficient designers. For a 10 or 12 or 13-year-old who’s just starting to get curious about some of the concepts involved in their structures, this could be an excellent stepping stone. The guidebook features contributions from a number of acclaimed firms, including REX, Safdie, Skidmore, MAD, and Sou Fujimoto, among others. Their real-world projects are used to bridge the gap between the clean plastic world of Lego and the one we live in. A hundred and fifty bucks for a bunch of white bricks might seem steep, but it’s hard to get mad at a product aimed squarely at encouraging kids to nurture their innate creativity in imagination. And if you’re looking for slightly more profound way of putting that, this passage from the guide book does a fine job: “It is no coincidence that Frank Lloyd Wright, Le Corbusier, and Buckminster Fuller were all taught kindergarten in the school system that introduced building blocks into educational play.

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