Mimi wrote:
That’s amazing, Flis!!
I have a couple of questions, if I may? I see all of your Lego storage behind. In what way do you ‘sort’ your bricks? By type, colour, set, etc?
Also, what does this mean? I don’t think I quite understood it (but the biggest lego things I’ve ever built are little motorbikes, horse and cart, ice cream truck type things from the little instruction books in Darwin’s ‘Big tub of Lego’ type boxes.
flis wrote:
The final bag is not used in the build below as that is the parts you need to take the ship off the island and connect it all together back into it's sea-worthy form!! So amazing!
Thanks, Mimi! And I love Lego related questions so thanks for asking
The answer might be a bit long though as I am rubbish at explaining.
Currently, my collection is sorted in a couple of ways because it's not massive. The more it grows, the more trays I buy and start sorting by sub-sections or into colours.
The building bricks (2x2, 2x3, 2x4, 2x6) are stored by colour shade. So all the green hues together, red hues together etc. There are 33 'regular' colours, so I would need 132 trays just for those 4 brick sizes if I sorted by separate brick size and colour!
The other 'regular' bricks like 1x2, 1x4 etc. and plates are stored in groups according size and in mixed colours.
Special or modified bricks are sorted by type in mixed colours. So all the modified 1x2 bricks together, all the modified 1x1 bricks together etc. A modified brick would be like the masonry effect or other moulded face brick, or bricks with holes through the face etc.
All the full arch bricks are together in mixed colours.
All the half arch bricks are together in mixed colours.
Slopes are separated by slope size 1x2, 2x2, 1x3, 2x4, 1x4, inverted etc. but stored in mixed colours.
Other bricks are stored by function, so if it's a hinge or can be used as part of a hinge, it's in one tray.
Bricks with studs on the face are in one tray, too.
I sort like that because if I know I want to build something with a hinge action, for example, I can go through the tray to find a hinge that works best. Sometimes you don't know specifically what you're looking for until you see the pieces.
Most of the boxed sets come as a series of numbered bags inside the box now. The only ones that generally don't are the 3-in-1 Creator sets and the smaller (under £15-20) sets. You work your way through the numbered bags in sequence so that you're not swimming in hundreds of pieces you don't need until the final step! Below are the bags before I started building. There were 3 bags with '1' on them, so you empty all those out together for the first stage of the instructions.
Sets are great, and you learn lots of new building techniques from following the instructions but I love the big mixed buckets of Lego. I think that for kids it is the best way for them to play, especially once the sets are taken apart - chuck it all in the same box. I know when I was little I would start off wanting to build a house and by the time I'd sat in the middle of all my Lego all weekend, I'd have a space hotel with wings and an ejector seat.