Botanicals

Flower Arrangement

Seven flower types, one big vase, and the most swappable bouquet LEGO has made yet.

Brick Rated Score

4.2 out of 54.2/5

Set 10345 · 2025

Pieces1,163
Minifigsn/a
Year2025
Set number10345

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The verdict

This one won me over slowly.

It's basically every good idea from the Botanicals bouquets gathered into a single filled vase, and the swap-anything pin system is the part I keep coming back to. The price stings for what is essentially two of each flower, so you have to actually want a big permanent centerpiece. If you do, it earns its spot.

Best for: Botanicals fans who want one finished vase on display, not another pile of loose stems

The full review

What it is

The Flower Arrangement is LEGO's attempt to answer a question Botanicals fans have been asking for a while, which is why the flowers and the vase always came in separate boxes. Here they finally arrive together. You get seven types of flower, two of each, plus foliage sprigs, all sitting in a white mounded vase that is built to hold them at nice natural angles. The lineup is genuinely varied: a deep Night Rider Camellia, a sunny yellow Itoh peony, purple hydrangea, an orange-gradient Persian buttercup, an orange lily, a lavender hummingbird flower, and little clouds of white baby's breath to fill the gaps. Set it on a shelf finished and it reads as an actual arrangement, not a spray of stems poking out of a jar. That is the thing I like most about this LEGO® set. It looks composed.

The catch

The money is where I have to be straight with you, because it matters here. This set is $109.99, and if you tally up the flowers you are getting roughly what a couple of the cheaper bouquet sets would give you, for close to double the outlay. You are paying for the vase and the all-in-one presentation, and whether that is worth it depends entirely on whether you want a single display piece or maximum flowers per dollar. The build also has some patience-testing stretches. The hydrangea is built from 68 tiny butterfly pieces clipped together, and while the effect is lovely, doing it is a slog. A few builders found the whole thing a touch repetitive, and the final arranging step, where the instructions only loosely color-code what goes where, gets a little chaotic when the vase is crowded. The vase itself, which is clever underneath, looks slightly rough and gappy if you lean in close.

Who it's for

The real question is who ends up happy with it. If you already love the Botanicals line and you have been wishing for one finished centerpiece instead of another handful of loose bouquets, this is the easy yes. The swap system is the clincher: every flower head pops off a pin, so you can pull blooms from your other Botanicals sets and rebuild the arrangement into something that is genuinely yours, then change it again next season. If you are chasing pure value or you get bored by repetition, you will feel that price and those 68 butterflies, and you might be happier buying two individual bouquets instead. But as a thing to look at every day, this one delivers. It is calm to build, it forgives mistakes, and the payoff sitting on a shelf is real.

The parts story

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

The build splits neatly into the vase, then seven flowers you make twice each, then the arranging. The vase is the sneaky-clever part: a sturdy SNOT core hides inside half cylinders, with a clip-and-inkwell trick flipping studs around so the outside stays smooth, and the mounded top is studded with bar tiles that the stems clip into. After that you settle into flower-making, and the pacing swings between delightful and fiddly. The Persian buttercup uses upside-down mudguards to make a little vortex of orange petals, which is the sort of technique that makes you grin. The hydrangea, on the other hand, is 68 butterfly elements assembled into clusters, effective but genuinely tedious. Wand pieces stand in as stamens, and the newer 1x1 round brick with three bars lets branches fan out at natural angles without a mess of connections.

There are no new molds here, which is worth being straight about, but there are 14 elements appearing in fresh colors for the first time and around 11 parts that show up in only one to three other sets, so the parts drawer payoff is real for MOC builders. Highlights include leaf and petal elements in orange and green, rounded corner bricks in reddish orange, clam shell halves in yellow, dish pieces in magenta and dark red, and ladybug wings in medium lavender. At 1,163 pieces for $109.99 the price per piece runs about 9.5 cents, which is on the higher side, but a big chunk of that count is genuinely useful botanical petal and leaf parts rather than filler, and the swap-pin standard means every one of these flowers plays nicely with the rest of the Botanicals range.

Fun facts

  • 01The set was designed by Wes Talbott, and every flower head sits on a pin so you can pull it off and swap in blooms from other LEGO Botanicals sets to build your own custom arrangement.
  • 02The purple hydrangea is assembled from 68 separate butterfly elements, one of the most part-repetitive single flowers in the whole Botanicals line.
  • 03The 135-page instruction booklet reads almost like a plant guide, giving real background on each of the seven flower species as you build it.
  • 04The Persian buttercup petals are made from upside-down car mudguard pieces arranged into a vortex shape, a reuse no one would guess from looking at the finished bloom.

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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