Botanicals

Petite Sunny Bouquet

A pocket sized bouquet that never wilts, and never quite dazzles either.

Brick Rated Score

3.9 out of 53.9/5

Set 10347 · 2025

Pieces373
Minifigsn/a
Year2025
Set number10347

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The verdict

I built this on a slow Sunday afternoon and it did exactly what a good bouquet set should do, it gave me forty five quiet minutes of snapping stems together while my brain switched off.

The billy buttons and the little peony are the pieces that made me smile, they look genuinely soft and full even though they are hard plastic. I will not pretend this is a showstopper next to the bigger Botanical arrangements, it is smaller, it is simpler, and it knows it. If you want an easy, affordable way into the flower sets, or a gift for someone who says they do not do LEGO, this is a lovely low pressure starting point.

Best for: first time botanical builders and anyone who wants a quick gift under thirty dollars

The full review

What it is

The name gives it away, this is the small, friendly cousin of LEGO's bigger flower sets, and it is built to be a first date with the Botanicals line rather than the main event. You get a mixed bouquet, billy buttons, bluebells, a peony, a tulip, pink gerbera and yellow yarrow all mixed together in soft pastel colors, and the stems are adjustable so the finished piece does not sit frozen in one pose. I liked that more than I expected to, being able to tilt a flower forward or spread the bunch out wider makes it feel like you actually arranged something instead of just snapping a diagram together.

The catch

I will be honest about the size, though. At 373 pieces and around 22 centimeters tall, this sits at the small end of the Botanical range, and there is no vase in the box. You are meant to supply your own container or just let the stems stand as is, which stung a little when I unboxed it expecting a complete display piece. The build itself is gentle rather than clever, individual flowers go together fast and then get gathered into the bunch, so if you are hoping for the kind of engineering surprises the bigger LEGO sets are known for, this is not that set. It is closer to craft therapy than construction puzzle.

Who it's for

Give this to someone who has never built LEGO as an adult and wants to see what the fuss is about, or keep it for yourself on a night you want something low stakes to build in front of the TV. Skip it if you already own one of the larger Botanical bouquets, you will notice the size and price per piece difference right away, and skip it if a bare vase-less bouquet on your desk bothers you more than it should.

The parts story

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

Building the Petite Sunny Bouquet is unhurried in the best way. Each flower comes together as its own little sub build, stem, leaves, bloom, snap into a stalk, then all of them get bundled together at the end into one bouquet. There is no manual trickery here, no hidden sub assemblies that fold out into something surprising, it is calm, repetitive, satisfying work, and most builders get through it in under an hour.

The real personality lives in the specialty flower pieces. The billy buttons in particular are a standout, small round tufted elements that read as fuzzy pom pom flowers even though every stud is hard plastic, and the peony bloom does a convincing job of looking layered and soft. The adjustable stem system, a hallmark of the whole Botanicals range, is what saves the build from feeling static, you can angle each flower once it is in the bunch so no two builders end up with an identical looking bouquet. At roughly eight cents a piece it lands in the normal range for this line, not a bargain, but fair for a set built around specialty molds rather than basic bricks.

Fun facts

  • 01Petite Sunny Bouquet launched on May 1, 2025 with an RRP of $29.99 in the US, 24.99 pounds in the UK, and 29.99 euros in Europe.
  • 02It carries no vase in the box, unlike several other sets in the Botanicals theme, which makes it more of a bare bouquet you dress up yourself.
  • 03LEGO designer Theo Bonner is credited with the set, and the finished bouquet measures about 22 by 8 by 5 centimeters.
  • 04Botanical sets are consistently one of LEGO's best selling adult ranges precisely because they attract people who otherwise never buy a construction set, and this small, affordable entry is aimed squarely at that crowd.

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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