Snow White's Jewelry Box
A tiny storybook you build, then actually use on your desk.
Brick Rated Score
Set 43276 · 2024
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I love that this one has a job to do after you finish it.
Close the lid and it sits there looking like a little painted keepsake box, open it and you get a small storybook scene with Snow White and the Evil Queen facing off. It's not a huge build and it won't test your engineering brain, but as a display piece that doubles as actual storage, it earns its spot on a shelf. Get it if you want a quick, satisfying build with real function, and skip it if you need lots of parts for your money.
Best for: Disney fans and desk-decor lovers who want a quick build that actually opens and holds things
What it is
I'll be honest, I didn't expect to like a jewelry box set this much. Snow White's Jewelry Box is part of that run of Disney princess box builds, and what got me was the hinge. You build a painted-looking case, snap the lid shut, and it just sits there like something you'd actually keep on a dresser. Open it up and there's Snow White and the Evil Queen tucked inside, a whole tiny confrontation staring back at you every time you lift the lid.
The catch
Here's the honest part on price. At $44.99 for 358 pieces, you're paying more per piece than you would for a straightforward playset, and that's because a good chunk of this build is decorative shell rather than clever mechanism. The construction itself moves fast too, so if you're the kind of builder who wants a weekend project, this isn't it. Think of it more as an afternoon build with a nice payoff at the end.
Who it's for
I'd hand this to a Disney fan who wants something pretty and functional rather than something huge. It's a lovely little gift-shelf piece, especially with the Evil Queen minifigure included, since she doesn't turn up in sets very often. If you need volume, lots of parts, or a long build session for your money, look elsewhere in the Disney lineup. If you want a keepsake that works as a keepsake, this one delivers.
The parts story
What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.
The build moves in stages, first the box shell and hinge mechanism, then the little interior scene that reveals itself when you lift the lid. It reads more like assembling a display case than a typical LEGO set, with a lot of plating and finishing touches rather than complex sub-builds. It's the kind of build where the final click of the lid closing is the moment that sells the whole thing.
The two minifigures are the real story here. Snow White and the Evil Queen were both made exclusive to this set, and getting a proper Evil Queen minifigure at all is a treat since she's not a common figure across the Disney line. Piece count sits at 358 for $44.99, which works out to around 12.6 cents a piece, on the higher end for what you get, but that reflects the decorative, storage-box nature of the build rather than a straight brick count.
Fun facts
- 01The set was designed by Boone Langston and released June 1, 2024, before retiring July 31, 2025, giving it just over a year on shelves.
- 02Both minifigures, Snow White and the Evil Queen, were made exclusive to this set at the time of release.
- 03The finished model measures roughly 11 x 17 x 10 cm and is built to function as an actual desk accessory with storage space, not just a static display.
- 04It belongs to a wave of Disney princess jewelry box sets LEGO released around the same period, each one built to double as a keepsake box once closed.
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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