Lego flowers blog post

Experimental Lego Flower Design

Lego Wedding

After distracting my wife to be with a shiny engagement ring, it was time to order a ton of Lego and start the design phase of my year long Lego Wedding project!

Once I got over the new brick excitement, I knocked together a small simple Lego flower with 7 petals clipped onto a Lego technic steering wheel.  Simple yet dull.

I then got more creative and developed two new intricate and effective techniques. The yellow Tulip (open and closed versions) took 4 core petals which were attached to a central core with outward facing studs. I liked this lots. I then tried another technique by layering various slate bricks upon each other to build a larger red flower (not a clue if this resembles any real world flower). This technique allowed me to create petals of any shape. These quick mock ups would form the basis of the next two flowers I would design…

Lego Gerberas

Flicking through images of Gerberas flowers on Pintrest, I concluded it would be good candidate for my layered petal technique. My initial version used a two tiered petal design clipped onto a octagon shaped Lego brick. I then added another technic steering wheel to it’s centre to complete the flower (left pic). Whilst this worked well, it wasn’t round or full enough. I therefore tweaked the petal design and added extras to create the full Gerberas look (right pic). This design also leveraged a Lego pipe which was secured to a technique wheel and octagon. Only issue was it was a little heavy, yet still quite a realistic copy of a real life Gerberas.

Lego Rose

Designing a Lego Rose was always going to be a flower I would want to attempt for the Lego Wedding!  My Lego Rose was built using the same technique as the Tulip, with a central core of outward facing studs attaching 4 core petals. The picture below is the second version of my Lego Rose. I take this design further in my next blog post focused on perfecting Lego Rose design…

Lego Engagement Ring Box Open Close Up

Lego Engagement Ring Box

Lego Wedding

What better way to persuade my future wife to have a Lego themed wedding, than proposing to her with an engagement ring in a Lego box!

The ring box went through various iterations, utilising various red, black and white tiled bricks left over from my childhood Lego collection. The box sits at 6 x 6 studs wide and 3 bricks high to match the dimensions of a standard ring box.  The ring (not made of Lego!) sits on a mini raised plinth made from a 2 x 2 brick and a few 1 x 2 slates for a secure ish fit. Luckily her costume jewellery worked as a perfect substitute while designing this box whilst I spent a few weeks going in and out of shops looking for the perfect engagement ring.

The box and the ring was a success and she said “yes” when I proposed in Budapest on a four wheeled bicycle on November 2014. The Lego wedding theme snow balled from here…

Brick Twist Introduction Feature

Building a Lego Blog Brick by Brick

General

Welcome….

I am currently sat on a deck chair in Croatia celebrating my honeymoon after 18 months of planning my Lego themed wedding.  68 roses, 16 thistles, 4 vases, 13 large letters, 1 personalised table plan, invitations, 44 personalised mini figures and a customised ring box ALL made of Lego! Why? Lego has been my hobby and passion for the last 3 years, so what better way to make the most important day in your life unique and special!

Now that the big day has come and gone, what next? Well now that I plan to take a two to three month break from building Lego, I thought it was about time kick off a blog to document the Lego wedding build process. Once I recovered from Lego fatigue, will also start to add additional projects as they come.

Back to the wine, beer, cocktails and endless food for now.

Mark