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Parents, rejoice: For the first time ever, there’s a Lego brick so tiny that you can’t see it, let alone step on it.

The brick in question is a microscopic sculpture created by U.K.-based artist David A Lindon. It’s made from a standard red square Lego, and it looks like one, too, aside from the fact that it measures just 0.02517 millimeter by 0.02184 millimeter (about the size of a white blood cell). As of this month, the brick has snagged the Guinness World Record for the smallest-ever handmade sculpture, measuring four times smaller than the previous record holder.

We’ve seen lunar Legos, renewable Legos, and giant Legos, but this brick might just be the most innovative one yet—and the process of creating it was almost as unusual as the object itself.

The world’s tiniest Lego is the smallest of three micro Legos Lindon’s created, according to his website. Materials science firm Spectrographic professionally measured each Lego to confirm the Guinness record. “With all three sculptures, one smaller than the other, they are so microscopic that even though you know where they are, on the head of a pin, when you look with your own eyes you still cannot see them,” Lindon writes. 

i-1-91284667-tiniest-lego.jpg[Image: David A Lindon/Hammond Gallieries/SWNS]

Lindon has been creating micro paintings and sculptures since 2021. His past works include a version of Stonehenge small enough to live atop a miniature pushpin, a statue of Beetlejuice that’s less than half the size of a match head, and a rendition of Vincent van Gogh’s Sunflowers that fits inside the eye of a needle.

To bring his works to life, Lindon uses a Nikon SMZ25 microscope that requires a foot pedal to control zoom and focus. Then, he works with what he calls “micro precision tools” and materials such as micro-size pigments, dust, minerals, Kevlar strands, carbon, and carpet fibers to carve and shape his creations.

Unsurprisingly, this niche practice presents a host of specific design challenges. In an interview with the BBC, Lindon shared that he’s trained himself to work between the beats of his heart to prevent the pulse in his fingertips from destroying his work. To create his record-breaking Lego, he said, he worked 6 to 10 hours each night so as to avoid the vibrations brought on by passing traffic. On his website, Lindon details a slew of other threats to his work, including static electricity, sneezing, coughing, or a breath of wind from an open window.

“My first Amy Winehouse is still somewhere in our bedroom carpet or stuck on the sole of my shoe, we never found her,” Lindon writes. Luckily, he adds, his concentration has since improved, allowing him to hold still enough to create his microscopic works of art. Still, his practice takes time: “Each piece may take several months to get right,” he says.

While the record-holding Lego brick is unlikely to go on sale anytime soon—given that it’s essentially invisible—it remains a fascinating testament to the human capacity for artistic perseverance.


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