10329 Tiny Plants revealed

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Tiny Plants

Tiny Plants

©2024 LEGO Group

French retailer CDiscount has revealed a new addition to the hugely popular botanical collection: 10329 Tiny Plants.

The set comprises nine small plants in flowerpots of various sizes and an abundance of recoloured pieces and nice parts usage (NPU) can be seen among the flowers and foliage.

The 758-piece set will be released on 1st December.

Update: The set has now been added to LEGO.com, confirming the prices as £44.99, $49.99 or €49.99. Also, this set is available to pre-order now.

View more photos after the break.

10329-1

via Hoth Bricks.

74 comments on this article

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By in United States,

Definitely a missed opportunity for continuity with the succulent pots but I get that this one needs to stand out from that set on store shelves. Easily my least favourite entry in the series so far though.

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By in United Kingdom,

Brilliant. Am waiting for the LEGO dust buster to accompany the set.

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By in United States,

This looks like an amazing value! I love the look of the pots, and the recolors are fantastic as well! Pink epaulettes, lime green brooms, dark red hairbrushes, dark green newsies hats, and red clamshells to name a few.

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By in Ireland,

The botanicals range really just keeps releasing great looking sets. Some of the best ones to show off to non-Lego builders to see their surprise.
And €40! Not bad at all!

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By in United Kingdom,

Reasonable price.

If you stuck Marvel on it you could've charged three times as much!

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By in Netherlands,

That tiny Venus Fly Trap!
It's adorable, and I want it!

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By in United Kingdom,

Nice selection of builds that will make a great addition to previous botanical sets, plus it seems very reasonably priced. Soo more win. Think my favorite is the little venus flytrap looking one.

@jsutton said:
"Brilliant. Am waiting for the LEGO dust buster to accompany the set."

Honestly surprised that Lego doesn't already sell one, or at least some kind of dusting brush for sets.

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By in United States,

@SolidState said:
"Definitely a missed opportunity for continuity with the succulent pots but I get that this one needs to stand out from that set on store shelves. Easily my least favourite entry in the series so far though."

Every Botanical has had a different design for the pot, which goes a long way to avoid feeling same-y. I expect this will sell a lot of duplicate copies just for people who want to stock up on the clay pot parts. Or who want to regress the Baby Groot sets.

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By in United States,

Some of these look small enough to be additions to the enlarged Friends Botanical Garden building everyone has been expanding!

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By in Puerto Rico,

@Boettner_Builds said:
"Some of these look small enough to be additions to the enlarged Friends Botanical Garden building everyone has been expanding!"

Ah yes, the carnivore plant is a nice fit for that.

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By in Germany,

This looks like fun! I don't buy many botanical sets, but I may buy this one

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By in Belgium,

waw, actually looks good.
now to wait a 30%-40% discount an then grab it - sweet sweet value

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By in United States,

Aww, it's so cute!! I need this in my life.

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By in United Kingdom,

Love this set. A must buy for me!

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By in Netherlands,

FORTY BUCKS? Someone pinch me please

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By in United States,

Wow! What an excellent parts pack! Although I will be buying it for display for sure. Botanicals keep being the best value theme. Keep it coming TLG!

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By in Romania,

40€ is the discounted price, it should still be 50€ like the rest.
The same case happened with the early information of the liebherr crane back in july.

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By in Portugal,

It's 50 eur (49,99), not 40... at least in Lego Portugal

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By in Ireland,

@HDanke said:
"40€ is the discounted price, it should still be 50€ like the rest.
The same case happened with the early information of the liebherr crane back in july. "


Looks like the official page says the same. €50 it is. Not bad but not as good an offer.

https://www.lego.com/en-ie/product/tiny-plants-10329

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By in United States,

Excellent! I just love these. And they’d be perfect for decorating small spaces around the house that otherwise couldn’t support a larger LEGO model.

Some sets you need an entirely new room to display them. Botanicals line said “There’s gotta be a better way!”

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By in United States,

Very tempted to get this, even though I already have the individual plants from 10309 scattered around my room.

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By in United States,

This is one of those that made me say "I want it" as soon as I saw the thumbnail. It's lovely parts usage, and very cute. And unlike a lot of botanical stuff, it has enough variety to avoid repetition.

I also love that it has not one but two carnivorous plants. Both the flytrap and the pitcher plant.

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By in Sweden,

Great set, and not surprising they went with pots very reminiscent of 71426 Piranha Plant.

I'll be getting one eventually, and transplanting the plants in the pots from 10309 Succulents so that they're all compatible!

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By in United States,

I do like these, but they seem slightly more cartoonish than the previous Botanical sets.
Most of those had that "I can't believe this is Lego!" quality.

More amazing clever parts usage though.

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By in United States,

Delightful. I’ve been (almost) all in on this line and this is a great addition. I agree, they’re less realistic, but they have a nearly chibi (but not overly so) charm to them

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By in Canada,

Given the popularity of the Botanical Collection, I'm surprised that LEGO hasn't put them into their own category through LEGO.com rather than just having them lumped into the LEGO Icons category.

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By in Netherlands,

@GrizBe said:
"Nice selection of builds that will make a great addition to previous botanical sets, plus it seems very reasonably priced. Soo more win. Think my favorite is the little venus flytrap looking one.

@jsutton said:
"Brilliant. Am waiting for the LEGO dust buster to accompany the set."

Honestly surprised that Lego doesn't already sell one, or at least some kind of dusting brush for sets.

"


What part was used for the venus fly trap? The edgy piece?

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By in Germany,

The botanical collection is what got my wife interested in LEGO, so now she is a little less critical of my brick building (and spending).
That alone makes me love those sets. ;-)

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By in United Kingdom,

These are brilliant. When Botanicals began I wasn't anticipating another must have, completist (sub)theme, on top of Speed Champs.
And a theme that frequently looks even better in multiples!

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By in Australia,

The use of the cake topping pieces for the Venus fly trap is fantastic!

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By in United States,

That was my least favorite part of the succulents, so I'm glad they have little clay pots to accompany these. Maybe I'll transfer all of those to new pots also. Granted, how many LEGO plants can one person display in their home.

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By in Canada,

@GrizBe said:
"Nice selection of builds that will make a great addition to previous botanical sets, plus it seems very reasonably priced. Soo more win. Think my favorite is the little venus flytrap looking one.

@jsutton said:
"Brilliant. Am waiting for the LEGO dust buster to accompany the set."

Honestly surprised that Lego doesn't already sell one, or at least some kind of dusting brush for sets.

"


I always have my 1 inch soft bristles brush nearby.

I don't buy these sets (this one I might) but I tremendously love them as they bring all sorts of very interesting recolour. This one brings robot arms in red which will be very useful to me. The pots will also be very good for anyone trying to build a space shuttle main tank.

Not just one carnivorous plant here. On top of the Venus flytrap, there is also a yellow pitcher plant (sarracenia flava).

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By in United States,

@Zink said:
"The most boring and least creative of the botanical collection, yet. "

We lookin at the same set?

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By in United States,

Wait, if this is coming out on December 1, why does Brickset list this as a 2024 set?

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By in Netherlands,

They made them cute! I like it!

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By in Slovenia,

Definitely on my wish list.

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By in United States,

@merman said:
"What part was used for the venus fly trap? The edgy piece?"

It's a cake topper element originally made for Friends. It's part 65700.

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By in United States,

Great Christmas gift.

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By in United Kingdom,

@Toa_of_Pi said:
"Wait, if this is coming out on December 1, why does Brickset list this as a 2024 set?"
I wonder if 10326 will still be by next week!.....

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By in United Kingdom,

Oh I thought from the photos this was going to be a cluster of sets, using Botanicals established popularity to expand into smaller, cheaper impulse sets. This works too I guess

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By in United States,

My favorite botanical set so far. I especially love the Venus fly trap and pitcher plant ones.

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By in United States,

I'm waiting full bouquet roses, But probably get this release day after preorder goes away

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By in United States,

@Sethro3 said:
"That was my least favorite part of the succulents, so I'm glad they have little clay pots to accompany these. Maybe I'll transfer all of those to new pots also. Granted, how many LEGO plants can one person display in their home."

All them, I'm waiting for full bouquet roses

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By in United Kingdom,

@Toa_of_Pi said:
"Wait, if this is coming out on December 1, why does Brickset list this as a 2024 set?"

A good question. We tend to go with the (c) date on the instructions rather than the release date because often next year's sets are sold before Christmas, particularly in the USA.

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By in United States,

This has instantly gone into the cart I have running for my daughter's Christmas gifts!

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By in United Kingdom,

Excellent more dark orange for my space moc,s

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By in Poland,

Shame they havent reused that cool flytrap piece....

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By in United States,

@Huw:
We’re not quite that lawless. If the street date is next year, every other retail chain could be sold out by Christmas, but LEGO Brand Retail will still have to wait until the set is officially supposed to become available to start selling them. Exceptions have happened, but only with approval from corporate, and only for specific SKUs. Instances I can recall were triggered by TLM and TLBM, both of which caused enough of a run on LEGO sets in general, that breaking street date was the only way to keep shelves stocked. I don’t remember what got approved for the Christmas season following TLM, but the year before TLBM sets were due to go on sale, they were only allowed to shelve 70901, 70904, 70905, 70906, and 70909.

Otherwise, all that’s happening is that major retailers are getting their January 1st shipments in warehouse sometime in December, and immediately releasing them to retail stores. There’s no defined penalty for breaking street date most of the time (sell a single DVD or Blu-Ray early, and the store can be hit for a prohibitively large fine, per copy sold, so there’s no winning). TLG won’t actually do anything about it, because they can’t afford to lose such a massive sales channel. What _does_ get their attention is when some Hollywood studio imposes their own street date, with penalties. Nobody sold Ep1 or TCW sets early, because Lucasfilm was ready to lean on anybody who did. I think retailers were threatened with being cut off from future shipments if they sold anything early.

Gravatar
By in United States,

@GrizBe said:
" @jsutton said:
"Brilliant. Am waiting for the LEGO dust buster to accompany the set."

Honestly surprised that Lego doesn't already sell one, or at least some kind of dusting brush for sets.
"


No lie. All sets can have dusting issues. But, my rooms with Lego tend to be far from cooking and forced air. Most of my sets have straighter edges and are less fragile so are fairly easy to remove dust.

On the other hand, the botanicals are fragile and collect grease as well as dust. At least they can be washed.

Dusting issues aside, I like what they are doing with this theme. Yet, when I first saw these I thought, "There's more hat than cowboy." The plants look nice, but this is mostly a pot set.

Still, I will be buying this as a gift for Mrs. StyleCounselor per what @AustinPowers said.

Gravatar
By in Spain,

@vizzitor said:
"And €40! Not bad at all!"

€50

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By in United States,

@beige said:
" @Ridgeheart said:
"Those cacti look very useful to decorate a desert with. The prints could also feasibly be used as... fly-covered pea-soup, I guess? You know, if you're into that sort of thing."

I can't look at it the same again"


Waaaaiter!! There's a Ridgeheart in my brain soup, AGAIN!!

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By in Sweden,

The botanical series is quite the home-run, isn't it?

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By in United States,

@Lordmoral said:
" @Boettner_Builds said:
"Some of these look small enough to be additions to the enlarged Friends Botanical Garden building everyone has been expanding!"

Ah yes, the carnivore plant is a nice fit for that."


Especially if the owner of the botanical garden is named Seymour.

Gravatar
By in United States,

@Zink said:
" @fourstud said:
" @Zink said:
"The most boring and least creative of the botanical collection, yet. "

We lookin at the same set?"


That pathetic pink flower? The flat cactus? "


I like flat cactus, I can not lie.
You other brothers can't deny.

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By in United States,

Price looks great! I might just need to buy this

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By in United Kingdom,

Cactus battle pack.

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By in United States,

More PLEASE! My kids love these too

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By in United States,

@StyleCounselor said:
" @GrizBe said:
" @jsutton said:
"Brilliant. Am waiting for the LEGO dust buster to accompany the set."

Honestly surprised that Lego doesn't already sell one, or at least some kind of dusting brush for sets.
"


No lie. All sets can have dusting issues. But, my rooms with Lego tend to be far from cooking and forced air. Most of my sets have straighter edges and are less fragile so are fairly easy to remove dust.

On the other hand, the botanicals are fragile and collect grease as well as dust. At least they can be washed.

Dusting issues aside, I like what they are doing with this theme. Yet, when I first saw these I thought, "There's more hat than cowboy." The plants look nice, but this is mostly a pot set.

Still, I will be buying this as a gift for Mrs. StyleCounselor per what @AustinPowers said."


Thought there was april fools joke lego dustbuster,, before....

Gravatar
By in United States,

I do got say 1 thing....Those pots look really great.

I wonder if possible to make 1 big pot or half the size...
.....or maybe 2......

Gravatar
By in Netherlands,

@DekoPuma said:
"This is one of those that made me say "I want it" as soon as I saw the thumbnail. It's lovely parts usage, and very cute. And unlike a lot of botanical stuff, it has enough variety to avoid repetition.

I also love that it has not one but two carnivorous plants. Both the flytrap and the pitcher plant."


I think there are three, as I am pretty sure that the one on the left is a sundew (possibly Drosera capensis).

Gravatar
By in United States,

@Ridgeheart said:
" @StyleCounselor said:
" @beige said:
" @Ridgeheart said:
"Those cacti look very useful to decorate a desert with. The prints could also feasibly be used as... fly-covered pea-soup, I guess? You know, if you're into that sort of thing."

I can't look at it the same again"


Waaaaiter!! There's a Ridgeheart in my brain soup, AGAIN!!"


Je ne regrette RIEN.

@missedoutagain said:
"I do got say 1 thing....Those pots look really great.

I wonder if possible to make 1 big pot or half the size...
.....or maybe 2......"


I mean, it's Lego. Whenever you ask yourself the question "I wonder if it's possible to make...?", the answer is usually "yes"."


actually meant from 1 box/set

Gravatar
By in United Kingdom,

@StyleCounselor said:
" @Zink said:
" @fourstud said:
" @Zink said:
"The most boring and least creative of the botanical collection, yet. "

We lookin at the same set?"


That pathetic pink flower? The flat cactus? "


I like flat cactus, I can not lie.
You other brothers can't deny."


You're a poet and you don't know it.

Gravatar
By in Russian Federation,

Hats! hats! hats!

Gravatar
By in United States,

@Zink said:
"The flat cactus? "

Is it that you think they did a bad job of representing the bunny ears cactus, or that you have a particular grudge against the bunny ears cactus in general?

Gravatar
By in Canada,

@Brickemans said:
" @DekoPuma said:
"This is one of those that made me say "I want it" as soon as I saw the thumbnail. It's lovely parts usage, and very cute. And unlike a lot of botanical stuff, it has enough variety to avoid repetition.

I also love that it has not one but two carnivorous plants. Both the flytrap and the pitcher plant."


I think there are three, as I am pretty sure that the one on the left is a sundew (possibly Drosera capensis)."


At first, I thought, there is no freaking way. And then I looked into a very large selection of the plant pictures and finally got one with the flower on. It is indeed a drosera capensis (most picture you will see do not have the flower on). It is a (somewhat/very) bad representation of it - this not being the fault of the designer - it is simply the scale is so small that it is difficult to render it correctly. To be excellent, the base and handle of the brush would have to be green and the bristles should be transparent red. Since the stem of the flower is red, this plant is specifically a 'red' drosera capensis because the regular ones are usually green (so forget about the base and handle in green - a red capensis looks pretty much like this).

There. A proper dose of almost useless botanical knowledge*.

* No knowledge is completely useless - only if you don't use it at all, ever.
(I don't own any of that collection but let's take the cactii for example, I assume the names of the plant were given in the instructions, right? I would hope the name of the plants would be given - making things educational)

Gravatar
By in United States,

Another must-have. Every time I think I can just back away slowly from my Lego addiction, they come up with something like this and I'm totally hooked again.

Not really a problem, except I've run out of storage space and am running out of living space too!

Gravatar
By in United States,

@HOBBES said:
" @Brickemans said:
" @DekoPuma said:
"This is one of those that made me say "I want it" as soon as I saw the thumbnail. It's lovely parts usage, and very cute. And unlike a lot of botanical stuff, it has enough variety to avoid repetition.

I also love that it has not one but two carnivorous plants. Both the flytrap and the pitcher plant."


I think there are three, as I am pretty sure that the one on the left is a sundew (possibly Drosera capensis)."


At first, I thought, there is no freaking way. And then I looked into a very large selection of the plant pictures and finally got one with the flower on. It is indeed a drosera capensis (most picture you will see do not have the flower on). It is a (somewhat/very) bad representation of it - this not being the fault of the designer - it is simply the scale is so small that it is difficult to render it correctly. To be excellent, the base and handle of the brush would have to be green and the bristles should be transparent red. Since the stem of the flower is red, this plant is specifically a 'red' drosera capensis because the regular ones are usually green (so forget about the base and handle in green - a red capensis looks pretty much like this).

There. A proper dose of almost useless botanical knowledge*.

* No knowledge is completely useless - only if you don't use it at all, ever.
(I don't own any of that collection but let's take the cactii for example, I assume the names of the plant were given in the instructions, right? I would hope the name of the plants would be given - making things educational)"


They are.

Gravatar
By in Romania,

@StyleCounselor said:
" @GrizBe said:
" @jsutton said:
"Brilliant. Am waiting for the LEGO dust buster to accompany the set."

Honestly surprised that Lego doesn't already sell one, or at least some kind of dusting brush for sets.
"


No lie. All sets can have dusting issues. But, my rooms with Lego tend to be far from cooking and forced air. Most of my sets have straighter edges and are less fragile so are fairly easy to remove dust.

On the other hand, the botanicals are fragile and collect grease as well as dust. At least they can be washed.

Dusting issues aside, I like what they are doing with this theme. Yet, when I first saw these I thought, "There's more hat than cowboy." The plants look nice, but this is mostly a pot set.

Still, I will be buying this as a gift for Mrs. StyleCounselor per what @AustinPowers said."


I only handle my sets with gloves and have seen less dust and grease buildup since i started doing it.

Gravatar
By in United States,

@HDanke:
I usually do a couple outdoor shows a year, plus a county fair and state fair (now under new management!), and you would not believe how much dust gets on everything at the last two. Packing up after the state fair is when I usually try to get everything as clean as possible, before heading into the holiday show season (club’s got shows every weekend in November).

Gravatar
By in United States,

@StyleCounselor said:
" @HOBBES said:
" @Brickemans said:
" @DekoPuma said:
"This is one of those that made me say "I want it" as soon as I saw the thumbnail. It's lovely parts usage, and very cute. And unlike a lot of botanical stuff, it has enough variety to avoid repetition.

I also love that it has not one but two carnivorous plants. Both the flytrap and the pitcher plant."


I think there are three, as I am pretty sure that the one on the left is a sundew (possibly Drosera capensis)."


At first, I thought, there is no freaking way. And then I looked into a very large selection of the plant pictures and finally got one with the flower on. It is indeed a drosera capensis (most picture you will see do not have the flower on). It is a (somewhat/very) bad representation of it - this not being the fault of the designer - it is simply the scale is so small that it is difficult to render it correctly. To be excellent, the base and handle of the brush would have to be green and the bristles should be transparent red. Since the stem of the flower is red, this plant is specifically a 'red' drosera capensis because the regular ones are usually green (so forget about the base and handle in green - a red capensis looks pretty much like this).

There. A proper dose of almost useless botanical knowledge*.

* No knowledge is completely useless - only if you don't use it at all, ever.
(I don't own any of that collection but let's take the cactii for example, I assume the names of the plant were given in the instructions, right? I would hope the name of the plants would be given - making things educational)"


They are."


First comment. As a carnivorous plant collector, it makes me incredibly happy to see them represented in Lego. The sundew, when I first saw it, made me think of Drosera graomogolensis. Known in the carnivorous plant community for being red, with shortish oval leaves. But as that's a lesser known plant, I doubt it was intentional.

Gravatar
By in Georgia,

Seems very small in sizes, is not it?

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