Legos—they’re not just for kids. Real architects use them to build recreations of iconic masterworks, and artists like to use them, too. Take Chris McVeigh, for instance, a Halifax, Nova Scotia-based author, illustrator, and photographer, who uses the iconic plastic bricks to create all manner of delightful vignettes.
A kind of “hacked” version of Lego’s building sets, McVeigh’s models range from holiday-themed to bygone technology to arcades—made all the more nostalgic by the inherently analog way Lego and other physical building blocks look.