Anonymous wrote:We keep the minifigures and their accessories in a smaller bin separate from the regular Lego pieces.
Mixed Legos go in a big, shallow, clear bin.
Expensive complete sets and special creations go on shelves mounted to the wall. We use metal brackets spray painted to coordinate with their room, and had clear acrylic cut at Home Depot for the shelves (at different heights out of reach of the little one, and clear so the kids can still see their creations from the floor).
A family member recommends sorting/storing bricks according to shape and type instead of color (studs, plates, wings, roof tiles, wheels, hinges, etc.). She swears that the pieces make less of a mess that way because the kids look for a certain type of brick when they are building, not a certain color.
Anonymous wrote:This is Op. To the prior few posters, it sounds like your kids leave the lego sets, once assembled, intact, yes? That is very cool, and I would just display them on various shelves in that case. My kids deconstruct the sets after playing with the assembled versions for a week or two (even big ones like Harry Potter, Star Wars) - so then we just toss the pieces in with the gazillion other legos and then we have gazillion plus 500 pieces. I do save the manuals in case they ever want to reconstruct, but it's highly doubtful they will ever do so, they tend to just "create" with the pieces after assembling a kit. Hence my thought about the ikea trofast - since the drawers are relatively shallow, my thought is we can sort yellow pieces into one drawer, blue into another, and so on. Still not sure if this is a good idea but it seems like there are many different lego storage ideas and I guess I just need to try one to see if it works for us.
Anonymous wrote:I have 4.5 and 7 year old boys that are Lego fanatics. They have been putting things together way past the age on the box.
Here's my dilema--I can store the pieces and minifigures just fine in the big lego bins or rubbermaid. My problem is the assembled kits--the giant starwars ships like the millenium falcon and bounty hunters, the giant harry potter castle, the superhero batcave, the HUGE minifigure prison, etc. These things can't be fit in bins--they are tall and bulky. Once one of these falls apart it is doomed. Right now- in my 7 year olds room we have a couple low bookshelves which store the assembled figures--and the top of the bookcase is for teh very big ones. Little ones top dresser is covered in the big sets.
I have a ton of great storage shelves with the slanted buckets in the rec room-but these are no good for assembled sets. I am thinking large table--etc.
I do need to get rid of old toys since Legos are the primary draw. They play with nothing else. They want nothing else for bday or xmas--not even electronic games. They do a good mix of creating their own things while also playing with assembled kits.
I have saved all instructions in one huge bag and I make a habit of keeping all mini-figures from same collections, e.g,. starwars, superheros, monster fighters, in the different labled clear gallon ziploc bags. We put them in there the night before my cleaning lady comes. It is a logistical nightmare that has to be kept on top of all times![]()
I am open to all suggestions.