| | Re: To open, or not to open. That is the question.
|
| (...) LEGO doesn't really fade in the light, but it does yellow. I had a Pizza To Go that I left near a sunny window for a couple years- now I have tan bricks, almost indistinguisable from authentic tan bricks, with white pizzeria lettering! (The (...) (24 years ago, 30-Sep-00, to lugnet.castle)
| | | | Re: To open, or not to open. That is the question.
|
| (...) Go (...) with (...) Blue bricks will also yellow. I have also seen very discolored red bricks. As far as opening sets up. I buy to play. I just opened a 1977 set the other day (664 TV crew, bought for the black cowboy hat, and other parts). (...) (24 years ago, 30-Sep-00, to lugnet.castle)
| | | | Re: To open, or not to open. That is the question.
|
| (...) What do they look like? More brown than normal blue? The discoloured red bricks I've read about have been described as maroon, but I have never experienced this, just discoloured white and pink so far. How bad can LEGO get? Like, if a white (...) (24 years ago, 30-Sep-00, to lugnet.castle)
| | | | Re: To open, or not to open. That is the question.
|
| (...) The blue bricks really do have a yellow cast to them, not a brownish cast. Another interesting difference is that they go together a lot tighter. I'm not sure the limit of how bad white LEGO can discolor, but it definitely can get the color of (...) (24 years ago, 1-Oct-00, to lugnet.castle)
| |