Bringing Kids’ Drawings to Life in LEGO
/Sometimes you come across a LEGO creation and immediately stop scrolling. Not because of the scale or the part count, but because the idea itself is just that good. That was exactly my reaction when I stumbled across a MOC thread on Lowlug.nl by Erik Smit aka Eti.
At first glance, these builds are playful, colorful, and wonderfully imaginative—but the real story goes deeper. While Erik brought them to life in LEGO, the true spark came from somewhere far more unexpected: a group of children armed with markers, big ideas, and absolutely no limits.
Erik was kind enough to share more about how these delightful creations made the leap from crayon to brick.
From Marker to MOC
Marco: These builds wouldn’t exist without the original drawings. Who created them, and what was the prompt behind these wonderfully imaginative designs?
Erik: The drawings were made by a group of children who have a weekly arts-and-crafts hour at the local community center in my village. The task for them was to basically draw their take on a dream house. Use your imagination; anything goes. That’s why there are quite a few candy and cupcake houses. And some children just wanted to draw something else...
Marco: What inspired you to recreate these drawings in LEGO?
Erik: It had been in the back of my mind for a while, I think after I saw a website a few years ago that turned children’s drawings into stuffed toys. That made me think, “Hey, I could do that in LEGO!” Last year, I spoke to the lady who leads the arts and crafts club, and she liked the idea, so we decided I would come by the community center to make it a reality.
Marco: The drawings are incredibly imaginative. Was there any story or shared theme behind them?
Erik: Not really, apart from the idea that they would draw their dreamhouses. They sat at long tables with long sheets of paper from a roll so they could also add onto each other’s drawings, but they ended up drawing each other’s own thing.
Marco: Did you use a specific building process to recreate the drawings in LEGO?
Erik: The drawings are 2D… LEGO is 3D. That’s why it’s basically flat houses of just 6 studs deep, without much going on on the side walls, with no back walls at all. That is perfectly fine for both the pictures and the shows. One child drew a heart-shaped house with several colored hearts around each other—I decided to use those colors in the side wall instead.
Marco: Have the children seen their drawings brought to life in LEGO yet? If so, how did they react?
Erik: Not yet! I will show them the LEGO versions soon. They all got free tickets for a show I help organize and where this will be on display. Plenty of play opportunity at that show too, but taking it home? Sadly no, those are my LEGO bricks. And they can’t play with it either, since it wasn’t built for stability. There’s stuff like a heart flying in the air held up by one flex tube, etc. If you touch it will collapse. It just wasn’t designed as a playset, so they can look with their hands on their backs.
Marco: I’m sure they will love the end result at the show! Thank you for your time, and I’m looking forward to seeing more of your creations in the future!
It All Starts with a Drawing
What makes this project so compelling isn’t just the clever translation from 2D drawings into 3D models but the restraint it takes to not “fix” the drawings. Instead, he embraced their quirks, their impossible shapes, and their joyful lack of rules. The result is something that feels authentic in a way many builds strive for but rarely achieve.
In a hobby where we often chase accuracy, complexity, or technical mastery, projects like this remind us that creativity doesn’t have to be complicated. Sometimes the best ideas come from looking at the world the way kids do. So if you are in need of inspiration, take a look at a child’s drawing. You might be surprised where it leads.
If you had to build directly from a child’s drawing, would you stay true to it or refine it? Let us know in the comments below!
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