where can i buy lego minifigures series 11

where can i buy lego minifigures series 11

where can i buy lego minifigure parts

Where Can I Buy Lego Minifigures Series 11

CLICK HERE TO CONTINUE




In our first non-SDCC news item this week (I think), the Series 11 LEGO Collectible Minifigures are apparently on sale now in Poland, and Herman Napierala has shared a nice scan of the character sheet with Brickset. We won’t know what the official names of the minifigs are until closer to the official street date, but here’s what I’m seeing in this series: Yeti / Abominable SnowmanIs he anything else?!Tell all your friends!With the rumored list of the Series 10 Collectible Minifigures floating around different LEGO sites and forums, The Daily Brick has released the names of the minifigures for Series 11. These won’t be released until late 2013 and have set number 71002. How excited are you to hear about this news?LEGO-loving girls and boys will be thrilled to learn that LEGO just debuted a female scientist in their Minifigures Series 11 collection. And more female Minifigures may soon be added to the toy block’s repertoire, with a line of female scientists in the works! 




The trio of scientists is part of a Minifigure Set project by Alatariel, which was designed to amp up the female presence in LEGO blocks. The project is up for approval, and has gained enormous backing with a petition supported by the Brave Girls Alliance. The lack of female LEGO Minifigs is evident, and the trio of research scientists would be a great addition to the block sets. The three new figures, which represent women at a Research Institute include three scientists and their subsequent labs. The Astronomer looks out at the night sky through a LEGO telescope, the Paleontologist inspects a LEGO tyrannosaurus, and the Chemist mixes the contents of two LEGO Erlenmeyer flasks. Sadly, most LEGO Minifigs are male. A female surgeon, a zookeeper and a scientist have been released in recent years, but the male figures heavily outweigh the female representation. Last year’s “LEGOs for Girls” were met with sexist disapproval, featuring pink gender specific scenarios. The new trio of scientists present a better message for both boys and girls, with a motto of “explore the world and beyond,” while maintaining equality for both girl and boy LEGO users.




The project is up for review with the LEGO Review Board this month, with hopes to begin the next phase of production later this year! MinifiguresLego MinifiguresLego Minifigures Series 11 Lego Minifigures Series 11 under eco kids, Inhabitots, Innovation, Interactive Objects Add to Flipboard Magazine. Image via Maia Weinstock. There are some new Minifigures on the LEGO block, and they love to study science. While this may not seem like an unusual departure from the toy’s regular line of explorers, academics, and swashbucklers, the gender of this tiny person sets them apart. The Minifigures Series 11 collection features a female chemist, complete with a set of beakers and lab coat. Even more exciting, three new learned ladies may soon be on their way in a project proposed by Alatariel. Here's how it works: Anybody can ask a question The best answers are voted up and rise to the top I would love to have one of each minifigure from the various LEGO Minifigure series.




Unfortunately, as you receive a random minifigure in each package, this is more difficult than it should be. I either have to purchase a lot of extra packages and hope that I eventually span the entire set, or I have to pay exorbitant amounts on the Internet for the minifigures I need to complete my collection. Is there a simple and reliable way, when I am in the store, to determine what minifigure is in the package? It can be done, but you need to be able to handle the packages. Different minifigure series may require different approaches, from barcodes to patterns of dots or dimples to feeling for certain characteristic parts in the bags. Those approaches have been documented in a number of places: Series 6 (feel + dots) Also, since every box has a set quantity of each minifig, if you buy a full unopened box of 60, you will get a full set of the minifigs. (More than one set in fact, but you'd have to look at the per-box quantities to see if it's 2 or 3.) I managed to get the five minifigures I wanted, right every time by feeling the bags.




It takes patience and a good understanding of how different bricks feel. There are some guides online that show you which individual pieces to look for. Use the process of elimination. If you're looking for the Witch minifig, look for a bag with slope instead of legs. The Witch is the only minifig in it's series that has no legs piece. Working in a store that sold collectible minifigures, I can tell you that you cannot differ each minifigure by barcode. The individual bags are packaged randomly inside a box of 60. There is an uneven quantity of minifigures so some are rarer then others, the quantity of each minifig is the same for each box. In the end, nothing's more reliable then your own X-ray machine... The cheapest approach is to buy a box online, keep the figures you want, and sell the rest. The most hassle-free approach is to buy the figures you want online. Either individually or as a set. Another option to help finish off your collections is BrickLink, sort of the eBay of LEGO.




There are plenty of sellers in the US with a large amount of reputation Here is a link to BrickLink with a listing of the Collectible Minifigs: Be sure to buy the 'complete set' figs otherwise you will probably not get the accessories. My boys and I purchased a precision scale for nine dollars from Harbor Freight and set it to grams. We purchased ten Lego minifigures series nine. We measured the ten empty packages for a weight of 19.8333 grams and divided by 10 to get an average wieght of 1.983 grams, or rounded to 2 grams. We then weighed the ten inserts showing the 16 numbered, named and pictured figurines, they weighed 28.8333 grams and divided by 10 to get an average weight of 2.833 grams, or rounded to 3 grams. We then made a list from 1 to 16 and named each number with its respective figurine and weighed each to get the following and adding the weight of the insert plus the package for a total package weight of: Number, Figure Name, Figure Weight in grams, Figure + P&I weight for total weight




-4 Knight 6.8 11.7 -5 Cesar 5.3 10.2 -6 Cop 5.4 10.3 -9 Cleo 7.0 11.9 -10 Judge 5.9 10.8 -11 Alien 7.3 12.2 -12 Mermaid 7.6 12.5 -13 Spaceman 6.2 11.1 -14 Jekle/Hide 5.4 10.3 -15 She Shield 7.5 12.4 Insert 2.9g Total wt. 28.8333g Package 2.0g Total wt. 19.8333g P&I 4.9 grams (this will be added to each individual figurine weight) Note that the missing weights are the figurines we still lack. We got 3 repeats and their weight varied by less than 0.01 gram. So, what we did next was to go on our hunt and stealthly enter the toy stores, break out the digital scale, zero it out and weigh the package. We made the list from heaviest to lightest and what we are going to do is to purchase just those weights that we do not have. Following is said list: Number, Figure Name, Weight in grams, Figure + P&I weight for total weight, As we find the new weights I'll try to repost and upgrade the new information. If someone has the figures we don't have and could post just their figure weight, we would greatly appreciate it.




Lastly, the insert weights were right on the money and exact to each other, but the packages did vary above and below the average by around 0.15 grams. What would have been more scientifically significanly would have been if we had weighed each bag that came with each unique figure, but we were so much in a hurry to battle that we lost focus. I think the varience in the package bag weight has to do with sloppy manufacturing than stratigic engineering to confuse us. Theoretically, it shoud be possible to tell the minifigures apart by weight, but you would need highly precise scales to do so. i find it rather easy to feel for the minifigures. All you have to do, is identify a uncommon trait that only that minifigure has, and then feel for that. for example, the conquistador has a breastplate. just feel for something bendy, hollow on 2 sides. its not that hard. Thank you for your interest in this question. Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).

Report Page