LEGO Ideas
We’ve got logos for LEGO Marvel and LEGO Star Wars, but how about a mascot for LEGO Disney, or more specifically the Pixar division? LEGO Ideas
21357 Luxo Jr.
Release: June 1, 2025
Retiring: TBC
Price: £59.99 / $69.99 / €69.99
Pieces: 613
Minifigures: 0

Pre-orde r now at LEGO
Luxo Jr. first debuted in a 1986 short created by John Lasseter, and for the past 30 years has been seen flattening the 'I' in Pixar ahead of every movie released by the animation studio. Disney has the mouse, Pixar has the playful little lamp, and after a good few Mickey Mouse-based LEGO sets,
This is a set that has the task of not only recreating what we see and know a Luxo lamp to be, but also building in the particular craft of character that Lasseter so brilliantly captured in his Luxo Jr. short of 1986 that saw the little lamp playfully interacting with a bouncy ball. As expected from the LEGO Ideas team,
When you build a LEGO Disney – sorry, LEGO Ideas – set based on Pixar’s long-lasting mascot for the past 30 years, expect references. And with
Most appear in the first stages of the build, from inside the ball to dotted through the base of the lamp, whilst there is one final one even built into the light bulb, and they are generally squashed into every corner possible. They are clever and fun details that have you picturing the films and characters as you go, and as much as anything else, they ensure that this all-white LEGO set is as colourful as any other LEGO Disney set.
Those details are then very much hidden away as you smooth out the base with a mix of simple and unique techniques – what may look simple in the final model is quite complex and intelligent in design in places.
From the base you move into the framework that makes up the body and head of Luxo Jr. It is slightly intricate to put together, it is primarily all the one colour, but it’s not a build that drags on for too long or feels boring to go through, thanks in part to the novelty of what is being built, new uses of a fairly new parts, and for how, relatively speaking, the entire set is pretty quick to put together.

How the frame comes together is smart in both the sturdiness that it offers the model, but also how well hidden a lot of the techniques are, so as not to distract from the final, all-round aesthetic of the LEGO set. As a build, it demonstrates a fine understanding of the mathematical dimensions of various pieces and how they can come together so tightly.
All that aside, though, with a LEGO set like this, most important is the proportionality and emotive aspects of the character are caught across the design, and
In addition, all the little details and ways in which John Lasseter first brought him to life 39 years ago are also at play, thanks to that realistic nature of the design, and the movement that has been built into the model, allowing
Everything that makes Luxo Jr. cute and alive on screen is found in
Our honest opinion:
This LEGO set was provided by the LEGO Group for review purposes.
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