Wildflower Bouquet
A meadow's worth of color that never wilts and never needs water.
Brick Rated Score
Set 10313 · 2023
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This is the Botanicals set I keep recommending to people who think LEGO flowers all look a bit plastic and stiff.
The mix of eight wildflower species gives it a loose, gathered-from-a-hedgerow feel that the earlier Flower Bouquet just never had. It is not flawless, and I have opinions about the missing vase, but as a relaxing evening build that ends in something genuinely lovely on a shelf, it earns its keep. Best enjoyed by anyone who wants real botanical charm without a florist's budget.
Best for: Anyone who wants a soft, colorful build that doubles as low-effort home decor
What it is
The first thing that struck me about the Wildflower Bouquet is how un-uniform it is. Instead of a dozen matching roses, you get fourteen flowers across eight species, cornflowers, lavender, Welsh poppies, cow parsley, gerbera daisies, larkspur, lupins and a few sprigs of leatherleaf fern for volume. That variety is the whole point. It reads like something actually picked from a roadside verge rather than ordered from a catalogue, and once it is standing in a jar on the windowsill it has a softness that surprised me. This is the set that finally sold me on LEGO botanicals as decor rather than novelty.
The catch
I will be straight with you about the caveats, because they matter at this price. At around sixty dollars for 939 pieces the value is fine rather than remarkable, and LEGO does not include a vase, which feels a little cheeky given the whole thing is designed to be displayed in one. You are on your own to find something that flatters it. The colors are bright, arguably a touch too bright for some rooms, and because the flowers are so bright and detailed they attract dust quickly. Cleaning them is genuinely tedious since the blooms disassemble at the lightest touch. The lower cornflower and its leaves also sit at a fragile angle and have a habit of dropping off while you fuss with the arrangement, which is mildly maddening the first few times.
Who it's for
None of that stops me recommending it to the right person. If you want a calm, low-pressure build that ends in something warm and pretty you can keep out year round, this is close to ideal, and it makes a lovely thing to have going with a cup of tea on a quiet evening. Flower lovers and anyone furnishing a first apartment will get real joy out of it. If you build for tight engineering and satisfying mechanisms, though, be honest with yourself, this is repetitive petal-and-stem work and it may not scratch that itch. Skip it if you already own the Flower Bouquet and are not fussed about wilder, more colorful blooms.
The parts story
What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.
Building it is gentle, repetitive in the nicest way, and easy to do in front of the television. You work through the stems one flower at a time, and each species has its own little assembly rhythm, so you never feel like you are grinding the same step for hours the way some big builds go. The instruction booklet moves at a relaxed pace across its 56 pages, and none of the techniques will trip up a newer builder. It is the kind of set you can share with someone across the table, each of you taking a flower.
The joy for parts people is in the reinvention. The blue and white cornflower heads are built from six golden crown elements held on a handle with six small sticks, which is such a satisfying bit of lateral thinking once you spot it. The lupins use colorful pirate hats stacked up the stem, and there is a palm-leaf element in a fresh recolor that collectors were quietly thrilled about. Add cow parsley rendered in tiny detail and a good haul of the brighter green stalk pieces, plus several elements moulded in plant-based plastic from sustainably sourced sugarcane, and the parts count starts to feel more worthwhile than the sticker price alone suggests.
Fun facts
- 01The cornflower heads are each made from six crown elements (part 39262), a piece originally designed for minifigure royalty, held onto a handle with six small sticks.
- 02Several parts are moulded from plant-based plastic produced using sustainably sourced sugarcane rather than traditional petroleum-based ABS.
- 03The set launched on 1 February 2023 and was re-released in 2025 with updated box art carrying the new Botanicals sub-theme logo.
- 04It packs fourteen flowers across eight species plus three sprigs of foliage, spread over sixteen individually adjustable stems.
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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