![]() The workshop is packed with accessory elements such as tools, coal and armour.The garden features an apple tree model and a well This 3-level building has a removable roof and the top 2 levels lift off for easy access to the fully furnished bedroom, kitchen and workshop.Includes 4 minifigures: a blacksmith, archer and 2 Black Falcon Knights with 4 swords, 3 shields and a halberd, plus a posable horse figure with a buildable cart and dog and frog figures.Capture the architectural details of a medieval blacksmith’s workplace and home when you take time out from modern life to build this evocative LEGO® Ideas display model (21325).Push the bellows to make the furnace glow and explore the garden with its gnarly apple tree, archery target and well, plus a horse and cart. Discover lots of authentic details and unique elements inside the 3-level building, from the medieval-style kitchen and bedroom to the fully equipped workshop. Missing the good ol’ days of the Castle theme? Robert has made another set redux (hint: there’s goats) that you can check out here.Step back in time with this impressive LEGO® model of a medieval blacksmith’s workplace and home. Also, the olive green looks gorgeous on the newly paved cobblestone, a color that you wouldn’t have found in this 2009 set. The classic brick slope roofing on both buildings has also been swapped out with a cheese slope roof for the blacksmith shop and a curved tile roof for the medium blue house. The brick-built tree branches have been substituted with Technic connectors, a pumpkin patch has been added in the back, and macaroni tiles now adorn the blacksmith shop’s archways. Drawing inspiration from all the original set’s essential features, this revamp uses more complex techniques yet still holds all the character and charm of the original Medieval Market. ![]() It was a beauty back then and it still does in this recent Medieval Market Village redux by Robert Maier, aka hellboy.bricks. For me, that set was the 10193 Medieval Market Village, with the hinge-open village houses and waterwheel powered blacksmith hammer. If you’ve been a LEGO fan throughout childhood, this situation might be familiar to you: spending hours staring at a set you’ve always wanted in the catalog, obsessing over it until you’d memorized every detail in that set, down to every last brick. Perhaps a pie made from the apples grown on the tree up top.Ĭlick here to see the other alternate versions of Bag End And the large chimney up top is no doubt evidence of a kitchen that’s serving up tons of delicious Hobbit meals. Bilbo looks right at home next to a pair of knights and a blacksmith. Made from the 21325 Medieval Blacksmith set, this build draws heavily on the medieval roots of Tolkien’s fantasy world. The first version of Bag End is probably closest to the one you’re familiar with. He’s built three different versions of Bilbo Baggin’s home, Bag End, made from only the pieces available in three different LEGO sets. And if you need proof of that, legoapprentice has got you covered. While the LEGO Group might not market the versatility of their sets in the same way anymore, that doesn’t mean modern sets are any less customizable. The pictures were just springboards for your imagination. ![]() There weren’t included instructions for them, like you see in the Creator 3-in-1 sets of today. As a child, one of my favorite things about holding a new LEGO set in hand was turning the box over and looking at all the alternate builds that the set could be reconfigured into. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |