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Average Review Rating: (0 Reviews)3Items related to LEGO 7637 Farm available on external websites:Buy lego city 7637 "retired" farm set 609 pieces w 3 ppl & 5 animals! bnisbBuy lego city farm 7637 retired new in sealed box 609 piecesBuy lego city #7637 farm, retired, 99.9% complete-missing 1 cow horn-no original boxBuy lego city farm 2009 (7637) 82% completeBuy lego 7637 farm ** sealed box ** farmer 2 cowsBuy new lego town city 7637 farm new sealed farmBuy lego city/town # 7637 city farm new sealed htfBuy lego large green base plate 16x32 2748 4sets 10185 10218 3723 10182 10159 7637 No reviews yet. Your ReviewOwn this LEGO set? Tell everyone what you like about it - add a review.Name:Review:Rating: 1 2 3 4 5Support This Lego Project So You Can Build One Yourself How cool would it be, after coming home from a great national park vacation, to sit down and build your own national park? Thanks to Gavin Gardner, a new proposal on the Lego Ideas website urges the famous toy company to create a series of play sets to build aspects of three iconic national parks: Everglades, Katmai, and Saguaro.




Each set would feature wildlife figurines, distinctive landscape features, and a toy ranger and visitor. Gardner told me he and his wife got the idea after his daughter received the Lego woman scientist set for Christmas, a set that was designed through the Lego Ideas website. “It’s a no-brainer—there should be a set for every national park,” said Gardner, a seasonal Park Service employee since 2001. (He and his wife, Danielle Norris-Gardner, met at Death Valley where she was working in interpretation.) Gavin is currently chief of resources and maintenance at Springfield Armory National Historic Site. “This set is both educational and provides a fun play and building experience,” writes Gardner, under his username LegoRanger16 on the Lego Ideas website. “With the Centennial of the National Park service in 2016, the time is right to join the celebration of ‘America’s Best Idea.’” How can you get these play sets for the kids—or the park-loving adults—in your life?




For Lego to consider the proposal, it needs 10,000 supporters. Consider logging on to the Lego Ideas site and clicking the “support” button to count your vote toward the project goal! (Supporting the project is free—but requires signing up with an email account and answering a short questionnaire related to the product. This took me about two minutes to do.) Creative indoor play that encourages creative outdoor play seems like a perfect idea for one of the world’s most celebrated toy companies. Lego already released a couple of park ranger figurines as part of a larger set several years ago (though Lego calls them “forest policemen”—close enough). Likewise, the Park Service has shown its own support for playing with Legos, if this model of the train system at the Steamtown National Historic Site in Pennsylvania is any indication. This seems like just the beginning. What about a Delicate Arch made out of Legos? An Old Faithful made out of Legos? Joshua trees made out of Legos?




Let’s get this idea into production—there’s all kinds of building to do! Visit the Lego Ideas site to support the National Park Service Centennial play sets. Kevin Dahl works as Arizona's Senior Program Manager in the Southwest region. He focuses on issues concerning Arizona's national parks, including such well-known places as Grand Canyon, Petrified Forest, and Saguaro.Aller à : , Lego Creator est une gamme du jouet Lego basé sur la construction et traitant de plusieurs catégories : les robots, les maisons (se rapprochant de Lego City), les petits véhicules (se rapprochant de Lego Racer) et grands véhicules (se rapprochant de Lego Technic), des animaux petits et grands. La complexité du modèle dépend de l’échelle du modèle, les petits utilisent des briques basiques mais les grands utilisent des briques complexes. Depuis 2006, la plupart des modèles sont « 3 en 1 », ils comportent la notice et les pièces pour construire trois modèles différents.




En 2007, dans le sous-thème Exclusivités, est sorti un bâtiment modulaire qui est un bâtiment ayant des minifig, ils sont très détaillés et utilisent des techniques très avancées. Avant Lego Creator, il y avait un autre thème qui lui aussi utilisait des techniques très avancées avec les briques de l'époque ; il n'avait pas de nom officiel mais il a, après son arrêt, été appelé Lego sculptures. Ce dernier a eu des sculptures en briques et des reproductions d'avions et de bateaux. Lego Creator est un thème qui au début était axé sur des minifig 4+ s'appelant Tina et Max, des constructions simples pour enfants et des « Bulk » aussi appelés seaux de briques. En 2003, il y eut des sets avec des techniques de constructions plus réalistes comme un 4×4 du genre Technic en briques. Ces sets plus réalistes s'appelaient jusqu'en 2006 des « designer sets ». C'est le thème Creator qui introduisit le premier calendrier de l'Avent Lego. En 2004 est sorti un sous-thème nommé X-pod qui sont des petites boites avec des briques pour construire un des trois modèles indiqués.




Ce sous-thème se termina en 2006. À partir de 2005, le thème ne s'axait plus sur les constructions pour les plus jeunes ni sur les bulks, ils ont été déplacés dans un nouveau thème, brick and more mais s'axait seulement sur le réalisme mais les sets pour enfants continuèrent sous un autre thème : Briques et plus. En 2006, un sous-thème nommé Exclusivités qui use des techniques très avancées et très détaillées. En 2013, le sous-thème Exclusivités est renommé « Creator Expert ».Having recently posted here that a couple of my articles had been published in Issue 4 of Bricks Magazine (those of you keeping an eye on the Gimme LEGO Facebook page will have seen that I also have a piece in Bricks Issue 5 as well) I can now report that I've also had a feature published in Issue 3 of Bricks Culture Magazine as well. I have to confess to having some initial doubts about Bricks Culture Magazine. Specifically, I wondered whether there'd be enough suitable content to sustain the world's first "LEGO pop-culture magazine for adults", and indeed whether the Bricks Culture target market was big enough for the magazine to be a success.




Some of my fears were allayed once I'd actually held a copy of Issue 1 in my hands and read it from cover to cover, though - I had to admit to editor Tim Johnson, a.k.a. Caperberry of New Elementary fame that I'd thoroughly enjoyed most of the content, not to mention being impressed with the overall quality and polish. It also appears that my scepticism about the target market was seriously wide of the mark - sales of Bricks Culture had apparently already substantially exceeded expectations even before the magazine was featured in the UK Channel 4 television documentary "The Secret World of LEGO", at which point the Bricks Culture website briefly crashed under the weight of enquiries.... Given how impressed I'd been with the mag, I was pleased when Tim approached me to ask whether I'd be interested in writing something to fill Brick Culture's "Sets to Search For" slot in Issue 3 (cover pic above), and I was happy to oblige. "Sets to Search For" is a regular Bricks Culture feature which focuses on sets which are, for various reasons, coveted and/or collectible;




previous occupants of this slot have included Set 4000016 Billund Airport and Set 3723 LEGO Minifigure. After much deliberation I decided to write about a Star Wars offering, Set 10123 Cloud City. This set, which is primarily famed for its inclusion of a number of exclusive and valuable minifigures, is interesting on a number of levels, and I share a few thoughts about the set and its perceived value in my article (excerpt below). In terms of the magazine as a whole, my contributor copy of Issue 3 arrived a couple of weeks ago and I've been gradually working my way through its 140 pages. My impression is that the high quality of content continues to be maintained, with a couple of highlights including a lengthy interview with the Surma brothers (excerpt below) whose work I've followed ever since I became aware of them last year, and a feature on Daniel August Krentz, designer of the iconic Set 375 better known as the Yellow Castle. Bricks Culture, which is published quarterly, certainly isn't cheap at £9.99 per issue.

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