Vintage set of the week: Dressing Table with Mirror

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Dressing Table with Mirror

Dressing Table with Mirror

©1973 LEGO Group

This week's vintage set is 272 Dressing Table with Mirror, released during 1973. It's one of 8 Homemaker sets produced that year. It contains 32 pieces.

It's owned by 196 Brickset members. If you want to add it to your collection you might find it for sale at Brick Owl, BrickLink or eBay.


14 comments on this article

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By in United States,

I didn't know salad dressings needed a whole table. That mirror also feels a bit superfluous.

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By in United States,

Seeing these old Homemaker sets, it occurs to me to wonder if anyone has made dollhouse style furniture for Bionicles. Would a typical villager from Ta-Koro have any need for a dressing table with mirrors?

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By in United States,

@MCLegoboy said:
"I didn't know salad dressings needed a whole table. That mirror also feels a bit superfluous."

You think that’s bad? You should see the size of the salad bar!

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By in United States,

Okay, this is weird. I just looked the instructions up on Peeron and the last page (http://peeron.com/scans/272-1/3/) shows show not two transparent 1x1s, but a yellow one and a black one.

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By in United States,

@iwybs said:
"Seeing these old Homemaker sets, it occurs to me to wonder if anyone has made dollhouse style furniture for Bionicles. Would a typical villager from Ta-Koro have any need for a dressing table with mirrors?"

Matau constantly describing himself as "handsome" implies there are some form of beauty standards in the MU, and we've seen stage plays/dances from time to time in (granted dubiously canon) media which implies some sort of performer culture. I'm sure Matoran would need to doll up their masks or armor from time to time to impress a crowd/client, at the very least in a Ta-Matoran's case it would help them assess the symmetry and fit of their masks without need of a mannequin

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By in Turkey,

Nice studless design for 1973 set. Studs at the top are probably to connect similar sets.

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By in United States,

@TheOtherMike said:
"Okay, this is weird. I just looked the instructions up on Peeron and the last page (http://peeron.com/scans/272-1/3/) shows show not two transparent 1x1s, but a yellow one and a black one."

oh, that's interesting. I wonder if it's different based on country

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By in United States,

@BlackFalconBirdman said:
" @TheOtherMike said:
"Okay, this is weird. I just looked the instructions up on Peeron and the last page (http://peeron.com/scans/272-1/3/) shows show not two transparent 1x1s, but a yellow one and a black one."

oh, that's interesting. I wonder if it's different based on country"


I know set numbers that differ by market are a thing (retail sets don't still do it, but promo sets of certain stripes do), but has inventory ever varied between markets, outside of Dino 2010/Dino attack?

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By in United Kingdom,

Looking at how crinkly that mirror is, would it be of the “Funhouse” or “Haunted” varieties do we think?

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By in New Zealand,

Magical times with flush edge tiles.

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By in United States,

@Lego_lord said:
"Nice studless design for 1973 set. Studs at the top are probably to connect similar sets."

Or just furniture knobs common in the real object design of the time.

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By in Netherlands,

That heart sticker reminds me that these were primarily aimed at girls.

Homemaker is the first in the evolutionary line that led to SCALA, Paradisa, Belville, Scala and finally Friends! It makes a lot of sense seeing the homemaker figs as 'mini' 'dolls'. The scale and specialized furniture also have striking similarities to Belville.

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By in Jersey,

@namekuji said:
"Magical times with flush edge tiles."

Ah yeah those OG tiles. Once they were pushed onto studs, there was no way you were getting them off again undamaged!

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By in United States,

@TheOtherMike said:
" @BlackFalconBirdman said:
" @TheOtherMike said:
"Okay, this is weird. I just looked the instructions up on Peeron and the last page (http://peeron.com/scans/272-1/3/) shows show not two transparent 1x1s, but a yellow one and a black one."

oh, that's interesting. I wonder if it's different based on country"


I know set numbers that differ by market are a thing (retail sets don't still do it, but promo sets of certain stripes do), but has inventory ever varied between markets, outside of Dino 2010/Dino attack?"


Well, I did get the wrong inventory (mistakes) in 7665 (wrong head for Obi-wan) and 7097 (wrong pieces). 7665 gave me an extra head in a bag. 7097 was maybe an instruction mistake.
I don't know if there's been differences in inventory for non-mistakes... at least stickers were different on some British vs Dutch versions.

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