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Vintage Lego Castle, getting into it
Hey everyone,
I love the vintage LEGO Castle sets from my childhood. Back then I didn’t have the money nor skills for it to it properly, I only had a few sets but still had a blast with it. I’ve now decided to get back into it.
Got a bunch of sets and a bunch of extra pieces to make the vegetation more interesting. I’ve always thought that LEGO should put emphasis on making the models a bit more lush. For starters, here are some great forest men sets I’ve gotten and added some vegetation to. Don’t you agree LEGO should put more greens/plants in?


Love it so far! These sets are so well designed.
My next thing will be to build and expand the
#6086 castle on the
#6090 baseplate for fun
19
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Really love this LEGO theme!
I certainly get that there is less playability if you get a gigantic pile of green.
Looks like you need a Black Monarch's Castle!
I made this thread a while ago with a view to sell a collection I have...
https://forum.brickset.com/discussion/26038/uk-fs-classic-castle-sets
It didn't sell and now I'm attached.
They all have a couple of shelves in a glass cabinet and I love them to bits.
Regarding vegetation, you can have both, that's the beauty of Lego.
I did however get #6038, #6075 & #6056 recently.
@Phantom107 enjoy those sets. I have a few of them myself (no castle unfortunately) and I wish I had the room to do a castle diorama.
Gray bricks were first introduced 1953-56 in Denmark and Norway only in 2x2 and 2x4 sizes as early (LEGO Mursten) slotted bricks...
Then they were discontinued for 20 years (except for plates starting in 1962)... until the 1974 introduced very rare 1650 Maersk Line Container Ship... which had a large number of gray 2x3 bricks...
But then TLG stopped making gray bricks until 1980 with the 722 Universal Basic Set, which had just a small quantity of gray bricks...
This set was introduced 2 years after the 375 Yellow Castle set (1978), so I tend to believe the comments about TLG not producing gray bricks due to military models being built from them. Then by 1984 when the real Castle System was introduced, LEGO produced gray elements in large quantities... including the 1985 805 Gray Bricks parts packs. And gray has been produced ever since.
Brown came out very subtlely in a few parts here and there (such as 1970s Homemaker and Building Sets with People). Even in the mid 1990s brown came out in the Fort LEGOREDO sets, but mostly as log bricks. So the new brown became common after the new millennium.
Except... in working on my upgrade to my LEGO Collectors Guide (upgrades free to current owners)... I came across a very limited period where brown bricks were produced in only 1 country....
These are bricks from the Norwegian LEGO subsidiary A/S Norske LEGIO (yes there is an "I" in LEGO!). From 1953-56 Norway produced brown slotted LEGO bricks in a different shade, and they were available as Pick-A-Brick (only in Norway, and some colors in Denmark). Norwegian retailers had a wooden box of mixed colors of bricks (some colors in several shades). And not only could you buy odd color LEGO bricks as PAB... but you could also do something that was not done elsewhere since then. You could fill your own basic sets with your choice of colors, something that was never done by TLG Denmark.
This is one of the many (and I do mean many!) new surprises in my Unofficial LEGO Sets/Parts Collectors Guide... finishing up my 4500 page guide this year (current owners of my online guide will get the upgrades free when I finish it).
Gary Istok
P.S. That baseplate in the box above was sold to customers as a 10x20 plate nailed to a fitted wooden block (again Norway only) in the mid 1950s, as seen in the boxed set above. Norway did so many odd and wonderful (from a collectors point of view) things in the early days of LEGO... as did Sweden, Finland and Iceland. :-)
Norwegian images, from my good friend Arild of Oslo.
LEGO.... its' story is much more complex than you could ever image!!
I'd rather have the history lesson.
Forever kicking myself for not focusing on Forestmen stuff when it was available; I had way too many interests as a kid to get completist about any theme...
It seems like they made an exception for gray in the palette in the classic space lineup, but it was mostly limited to plates, slopes, antennas, and other doodads, rather than bricks (with only a scant few here and there).
I'm curious how well the yellow castle did sales-wise in the lineup-- I know that the classic space sets in 1978/1979 sold like hotcakes! I wonder if feedback from kids indicated that they thought the yellow castle was too silly looking, hence moving to the gray, which had been established as successful for LEGOLAND space? I know I certainly thought so as a kid, and was much more intrigued when they had gray castles.
If I had to guess, I would speculate that GKC (or maybe even KKK) probably wanted to keep a vibrant classic color palette, but gradually conceded the more neutral gray.
DaveE