Botanicals

Bouquet of Pink Roses

The softer, year-round cousin of the red roses, and honestly the prettier one.

Brick Rated Score

4.1 out of 54.1/5

Set 10374 · 2025

Pieces789
Minifigsn/a
Year2025
Set number10374

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The verdict

This is the 10328 red rose bouquet reworked in soft pink, and I went in ready to shrug at a recolor.

Then I saw the layered petals, the way LEGO built dimension into the pink instead of using one flat shade, and the new curled rose centers, and I quietly changed my mind. It builds calm and quick, it looks lovely in a vase on any shelf, and the pink reads far less occasion-specific than a dozen red roses. If you want a relaxed evening and a decor piece you can leave out all year, this is an easy yes.

Best for: Anyone who wants a low-stress, all-year floral display piece rather than a technical challenge

The full review

What it is

The Bouquet of Pink Roses gives you twelve stemmed roses at different stages, four in full bloom, four blossoming, and four tight buds, plus four sprigs of white baby's breath to soften the arrangement. It is built on the bones of the wildly popular 10328 red bouquet, and I will be straight with you, I expected to feel a bit cynical about that. What got me instead was the color work. Rather than one flat pink, LEGO layered light and bright pink tones through the petals so the whole thing catches the light and reads as a real flower rather than a plastic imitation. Sat in a vase on a windowsill it looks genuinely soft and pretty, and the pink feels far more everyday than red roses, which always carry that romantic-occasion weight. This is a bouquet you can leave out in January and it just belongs.

The catch

The value question is where I have to be fair. At 789 pieces and a full recommended price of $59.99, you are essentially buying the red roses again in a gentler shade, and the two sets sit side by side on shelves, so nobody is being forced to upgrade. If you already own 10328 and you are chasing something new to build, this will feel familiar fast. The build itself is calm and beginner-friendly, around 30 to 45 minutes solo, and the three instruction booklets mean you can happily split it with someone else. The flip side of that calm is repetition. You assemble the same rose structure again and again, and by the last couple of flowers the novelty has worn off. The stems are another small quirk. They are jointed and trimmable, which is great for fitting your own vase, but the angled connectors mean the finished bouquet sometimes needs a nudge to keep everything standing straight and even.

Who it's for

So who should get this. If you love florals, want a relaxed evening of building, and are after a display piece that works all year without shouting romance, this is a lovely pick and probably the one I would reach for over the red version. It also makes a warm, lasting bunch of flowers that will never wilt, which is a quietly nice thing to have around. Who should skip it. If you already own the red roses and want fresh engineering, or if you build for the puzzle of a set rather than the finished look, the repetition and the recolor nature will leave you cold. Come for the color and the calm, not for the challenge.

The parts story

What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.

Building this is a gentle, rhythmic experience rather than a puzzle. You work through the roses in stages, and because there are three booklets you can pass one to a friend and knock it out together. Each stem is made from around nine three-module earth green connectors joined by short bars, which is what lets you snap them to length for your vase, and LEGO added subtle spike details along them for a bit of texture. The repetition is real, you will build the same flower many times, but it is the kind of low-effort assembly that is genuinely relaxing after a long day.

The parts are where this version earns its keep. The rose centers were redesigned so the petals curl inward more naturally, with a white peony element wrapped in a light nougat inverted dome at the core, a much prettier heart than the plain 2x2 round brick the red set used. Recolor hunters get plenty here too: sixteen of the 2x2x2/3 plates with side and raised studs come in bright pink, and sixteen bright pink wheel arch mudguard pieces do clever double duty as inner petals. For anyone who parts out sets for custom floral or pastel builds, that bright pink haul is the real draw.

Fun facts

  • 01The set is essentially a recolor of the hugely popular 10328 Bouquet of Roses, coming in at 789 pieces versus the red set's 822.
  • 02The tallest rose stands over 12.5 inches, and every stem can be trimmed to fit your own vase thanks to the modular connector build.
  • 03The leaves attach to fixed clips on the angled stem joints, a change from the red roses where the leaves sat on a four-way clip that could spin freely.
  • 04It released on October 1, 2025 at $59.99, and unlike some updates it launched alongside the red 10328 rather than replacing it, so both bouquets are available at once.

What other builders say

This write-up is grounded in real reviews and builder discussion, not just one opinion. A few worth reading:

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