I've killed every plant I've ever owned. Not through neglect exactly — more through a kind of optimistic incompetence. I'd buy something lush and green, put it somewhere I thought looked nice, and then watch it slowly give up on me over the following weeks. My windowsill has seen things.
So when I started noticing that my flat felt a bit lifeless — a bit beige and blank — I knew I wanted something that looked like nature without actually being nature. I'd seen a few people online talking about the LEGO Botanical Collection, and I'd always assumed it was the kind of thing for people with more patience than me. I was wrong.
Why I Decided I Needed It
It started with a particularly rough Tuesday. Work had been relentless, my evenings felt like they were disappearing into my phone, and I genuinely couldn't remember the last time I'd done something with my hands that wasn't typing. I'd been scrolling through home décor ideas — the usual rabbit hole — when I landed on a photo of the LEGO Icons Chrysanthemum 10368. It stopped me mid-scroll.
It looked like a real flower. Not in a cheap, plastic way — in a considered, architectural way. The pastel green flowerpot, the golden band, the wood-effect plinth. It looked like something you'd find in a design-conscious flat in Copenhagen, not a toy box. And it was £19.99. I genuinely checked the price twice.
Why This One Specifically
I looked at a few options in the Botanical Collection before settling on the Chrysanthemum. The roses are beautiful but felt a bit expected. The orchid was stunning but slightly more involved than I wanted for a first build. The Chrysanthemum felt right — it's layered and detailed, but the build process is genuinely meditative rather than stressful. I also loved that it comes with posable leaves and petals, so once it's built, it's not static. You can adjust it, fiddle with it, make it feel like yours.
I ordered it from ALTOE and it arrived within a couple of days.
The Build Experience
I built it on a Friday evening with a cup of tea and something low-stakes on in the background. I expected to feel impatient — I'm not someone who naturally sits still — but something about sorting the pieces and following the steps just... quieted everything down. There's a rhythm to it. You stop thinking about your inbox. You stop half-watching your phone. You're just building a flower, piece by piece, and it's genuinely lovely.
The instructions are available through the LEGO Builder app, which I used on my tablet propped up beside me. Clear, well-paced, and satisfying to follow. The whole build took me just under two hours, which felt like exactly the right amount of time — long enough to feel like an achievement, short enough that I wasn't flagging by the end.
When I placed the finished chrysanthemum on my shelf, I actually felt proud of it. That sounds dramatic for a LEGO set, but there it is.
How It Changed Things
This sounds like an overstatement, but bear with me: that Friday evening reset something. I started protecting my evenings differently. I've since built two more sets from the Botanical Collection, and I've started treating that hour or two as non-negotiable. No phone, no half-watching TV, just building something with my hands.
The Chrysanthemum itself sits on my desk now. It's the first thing I see when I sit down to work in the morning, and it genuinely makes the space feel more considered. More intentional. It's zero maintenance — no watering, no sunlight anxiety, no slow decline — and it looks better than any real plant I've ever managed to keep.
For £19.99, it's one of the best things I've bought this year. Not because it's impressive or expensive, but because it gave me something I didn't know I was missing: a reason to slow down.
Get the LEGO Icons Chrysanthemum 10368 here: LEGO Icons Chrysanthemum 10368 Botanical Collection Flower Decor Set
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