Pretty Pink Flower Bouquet
Fifteen different stems and not one boring one in the bunch.
Brick Rated Score
Set 10342 · 2025
Affiliate link. We may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases.
This is the Botanicals set I keep pointing people toward, because it fixes the one thing that always nagged me about the earlier bouquets: repetition.
You get fifteen genuinely different stems here, from daisies to a boat orchid to a buttercup built out of little Viking axe heads, and the build stays interesting the whole way through. It is not cheap for 749 pieces, and if you want a big architectural centerpiece this is a modest thing sitting in a vase. But for a display that never wilts and lets you rearrange it to your heart's content, I think it earns its shelf.
Best for: Botanicals fans who want variety over sheer size and a real flower arrangement they can restyle
What it is
I have built enough LEGO flowers by now to know the trap: you spend an hour clicking the same petal onto the same stem twelve times and your enthusiasm quietly leaves the room. Pretty Pink Flower Bouquet is the set that finally sidestepped that for me. It is fifteen separate stems, and every one of them is a slightly different little puzzle. Daisies, cornflowers, eucalyptus sprigs, elderflowers, roses, a Persian buttercup, a couple of ranunculus, a cymbidium boat orchid, a waterlily dahlia, and a campanula. The colors range from soft powdery pinks to a deep magenta on the orchid, with muted greens tucked behind everything so the bright blooms actually pop. It reads as a real arrangement, not a LEGO approximation of one.
The catch
I will be straight with you about the money, though. Sixty dollars for 749 pieces is on the pricey side, and if you go in comparing part counts to a City set you will feel it. The value here is in the parts themselves (many of them brand new or freshly recolored) and in the fact that this is a flower arrangement you never have to water or throw out. The other honest caveat is scale. The finished bouquet is a tidy tabletop thing, not a dramatic centerpiece, and it does not include a vase, so factor in something to stand it in. Manage those two expectations and there is very little to grumble about.
Who it's for
Get this if you already love the Botanicals line and you have been wanting one that keeps your hands busy with genuine variety instead of the same flower on repeat. It is also a lovely one to keep half-built and rearrange whenever the mood strikes, since the stems adjust. I would steer away only if you are chasing maximum brick for your dollar, or if you specifically wanted a large architectural bloom to dominate a room. This one is quieter and cleverer than that, and I mean that as a compliment.
The parts story
What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.
Building this is closer to working through a sampler box than assembling a model, and I mean that in the best way. Each stem is its own short chapter with its own technique, so you get a nice rhythm of learning something, finishing a flower, and moving on before boredom sets in. The stem lengths are adjustable, which sounds like a small thing until you are actually posing the finished bouquet and realizing you can make it taller, fuller, or looser however you like.
The part nerd in me had a field day. Roughly 224 of the 749 pieces had never appeared in a set before, which is a huge proportion. The buttercup is the showstopper: its layered petals are made from Viking axe heads in orange and reddish orange, dozens of them fanned out, finished with a little yellow axle in the center. There is a new light blue flower head for the daisies, an inverted bell element for smaller blooms, a new three-pronged stalk using 3.18 bars, and a stack of dark green recolors on bars, plant parts, and candlestick pieces. The rose uses a newer center mold that is easily the best rose the line has produced. If you part sets out, the pile of unusual elements here is worth a very long look.
Fun facts
- 01Of the 749 pieces, about 224 had never been released in any LEGO set before this one, an unusually high number of debut parts for a single box.
- 02The Persian buttercup's petals are built almost entirely from Viking axe head weapon pieces in orange and reddish orange, one of the line's most inventive parts reuses.
- 03The set gathers fifteen different flower and foliage stems, including a deep pink cymbidium boat orchid and a waterlily dahlia, giving far more variety than earlier Botanicals bouquets.
- 04It launched on January 1, 2025 at 59.99 dollars (54.99 pounds) as part of LEGO's ongoing adults-focused Botanicals collection.
What other builders say
This write-up is grounded in real reviews and builder discussion, not just one opinion. A few worth reading:
More reviews
All reviews
World Map
The biggest LEGO set ever made, and yes, it's really one enormous mosaic.

Eiffel Tower
The tallest LEGO set ever, and it makes you earn every centimetre.

Titanic
The longest LEGO set ever made, and one of the most rewarding builds I've done.