Random set of the day: Emma's Chill-Out Kitchen

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Emma's Chill-Out Kitchen

Emma's Chill-Out Kitchen

©2001 LEGO Group

Today's random set is 3123 Emma's Chill-Out Kitchen, released in 2001. It's one of 4 Scala sets produced that year. It contains 58 pieces and 1 minifig, and its retail price was US$20/£14.99.

It's owned by 19 Brickset members. If you want to add it to your collection you might find it for sale at BrickLink or eBay.


40 comments on this article

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By in United States,

Scala and Chill?

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By in United States,

Return of the horrifying Scala figures, I see...

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By in United States,

Capris and a midriff. Yep, that's early 2000s.

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By in United Kingdom,

That green bag looks like a really guilty frog. I don't know what he did, but he's got the look of someone who knows they've just been rumbled.

Hiding in a Scala set as an accessory wasn't enough for him to get away.

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By in United States,

Well. This exists.

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By in Australia,

Well, at least there's no minifigs as toys or babies?

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By in United States,

With that hair chilling out is the worst of her worries

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By in United States,

You may not like it, but this is what the perfect Lego set looks like.

Prove me wrong.

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By in United States,

Just remember that the "other" Emma will be RSOTD eligible in 2022......

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By in United States,

I was about to complain that there's no hi-res version of this set image but then I realised that I don't want one.

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By in United States,

@Isabella_and_Lego_Liker
I saw the set name before the picture, and briefly thought it was a Lego Friends set. Boy was I wrong...

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By in United States,

The picture's so tiny so it's impossible to make out, but is that a dog food print on one of the boxes? Sure it'd be massive compared to a minifig but that seems like a handy part to have.

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By in Croatia,

Just took a look through the parts list of this set, and it's got a lot of interesting pieces. The most interesting ones are probably the furniture elements and that Dalmatian Dog.
You may not like this set, but I can say that it might be worth getting it for the parts.

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By in United States,

Owned by just 19 brave Brickset members, huh?

That’s gotta be some kind of record low for RSOTD.

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By in United States,

Only 4 Scala sets produced this year and this isn't even the most horrifying. That "honor" goes to 3121 .

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By in United Kingdom,

I was trying to better see some of those cookbooks and such on the shelves, wondering if they'd work in a minifig's kitchen...then realised that with Scala proportions they'd probably be the size of the minifig

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By in Canada,

That girl’s got some serious pigtail action happening

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By in Netherlands,

I never understood why people need separated toys for girls and boys. This must be the worst lego theme. Those ugly dolls. Maybe lego can re-hire the whole scala department, just to fire them again as a punishment that these sets exists.

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By in United Kingdom,

Ah, my eyes!

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By in United Kingdom,

How are those sandwiches constructed? Are they single pieces?
Also, they are bigger than her head. That's my kind of sandwich.

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By in United Kingdom,

Burn it, burn it with fire!!!!

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By in United Kingdom,

Her kitchen looks like it was designed by Salvador Dali. I would not like to think what is in those sandwiches, but the frog-bag looks like it's eaten one and is about to throw up...

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By in United Kingdom,

Come on the 19 of you. Own up. Don't be shy.

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By in United States,

Owned by only 19. Is that the lowest of any random set of the day so far?

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By in United Kingdom,

She’ll be stuck on the loo with food poisoning if she doesn’t use plates for those sandwiches, not chill’n.

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By in Poland,

I still think the use of that foam pieces was great. I still have sandwitches from different set, and they are cool!

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By in Poland,

Mock it as I do, but my 4 year old daughter is now crying because she wants it

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By in United Kingdom,

Now we're getting into the good stuff!

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By in United Kingdom,

@captcrouton yes from a small child point of view this is a decent looking toy. A 4 year old won't care what brand name is on the box. I actually had the joy of seeing a Scala set for real last summer. It had a horse. It was a good solid decent quality horse. Way better than the Barbie ones out there. I thought to myself " if I were 9 I would soooooo want this".

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By in Australia,

I saw one of these BNIB Last week...should I go back for it?

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By in Croatia,

@gasdoc said:
"I saw one of these BNIB Last week...should I go back for it?"

Yeah, you probably should in my opinion. It's quite a rare set, and as I said earlier, it's got some really interesting pieces.

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By in United States,

My daughter is 9. Her two favorite toys are LEGO and Barbie. She's very interested in getting some Scala but finding the sets has been nearly impossible. Or at least that what I tell her every time she asks about them.

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By in United States,

Those cereal boxes are cardboard punch-outs, not plastic parts. Scala used a lot of different materials for their sets: foam, cloth, cardboard, stickers, as well as plastics.

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By in United States,

Geez, having to look at Scala should legally be classed as cruel and unusual punishment. They are hideous.

A lot of recent themes from LEGO makes me wonder what the heck they were thinking, but I swear, the designer of the Scala dolls must have been high at the time.

Another question--why are Scala dolls considered minifigs? There isn't any way for them to attach to another piece. Belville dolls (which I admit to owning a few--they scale well with 3 3/4 action figures) have 1x2 feet that snap to studs, and their hands are the same size as a minifig's.

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By in United States,

Geez, having to look at Scala should legally be classed as cruel and unusual punishment. They are hideous.

A lot of recent themes from LEGO makes me wonder what the heck they were thinking, but I swear, the designer of the Scala dolls must have been high at the time.

Another question--why are Scala dolls considered minifigs? There isn't any way for them to attach to another piece. Belville dolls (which I admit to owning a few--they scale well with 3 3/4 action figures) have 1x2 feet that snap to studs, and their hands are the same size as a minifig's.

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