BrickCrafting is built on more than custom LEGO® creations. It is built on the people in the Murray studio who keep returning to the table, the parts bins, and the sketchpad until an idea becomes something real. The museum crew image above captures that spirit in one frame, with the team standing beside four finished showpieces that started the same way most BrickCrafting projects do: as a conversation, a rough concept, and a pile of bricks waiting for direction.
At the center of that process is Ryan Herath, founder, CEO, and lead builder behind BrickCrafting. Ryan sets the pace in the Murray studio, moving from concept development to design decisions to the practical question every big build eventually asks: how do we make this work in brick? His role is part creative lead, part problem solver, and part steady hand when a build needs to shift from idea to structure. That leadership is visible across BrickCrafting’s work, from custom LEGO® kits and custom LEGO® instructions to large public displays and exhibition pieces that need to look good from the first sketch to the final install.
But a studio is never one builder alone, and the story grows stronger when the rest of the team steps into frame. Roxanne brings the kind of collaborative energy that helps a project move forward when details need shaping and ideas need another set of eyes. Daniel adds the practical, builder-minded focus that every studio needs when pieces, plans, and deadlines all meet in the middle. Then there is Ryan, better known as Bagel, whose presence adds another layer to the workshop rhythm, the kind of teammate who helps keep the process moving and reminds everyone that even serious builds can leave room for a little LEGO® levity. Until their official superpowers are named, they stand here as what every good studio relies on: trusted collaborators who help transform concepts into finished work.
That team dynamic matters most on the projects that ask for the most. BrickCrafting’s museum work is a clear example. These are not quick builds. They are detailed, iterative, and often shaped through rounds of testing, adjustment, and rebuilding. In the Murray studio, a museum showpiece may begin as reference gathering on one table, part sorting on another, and early structural experiments taking shape a few feet away. Over time, the build finds its footing. Sections lock in. Color choices settle. Fragile ideas become sturdy forms. Brick by brick, the story becomes physical.
That is what gives BrickCrafting’s exhibition work its presence. The team creates bespoke LEGO® models for museum displays that do more than fill space. They invite people to pause, look closer, and see familiar subjects in a new medium. Whether the project draws from history, nature, or local identity, the goal is not just accuracy. It is connection. The four museum showpieces in the photo reflect that approach well. They show what happens when design, patience, and teamwork all click into place like a row of well-seated bricks.
The same collaborative spirit carries beyond museum walls. BrickCrafting regularly works with volunteers and members of the Utah LEGO® User Group on larger displays and public events, expanding what the team can build together. That shared approach also feeds back into the company’s retail and educational work. The same hands that help shape a museum showpiece may also help refine custom LEGO® kits, review custom LEGO® instructions, or support STEM workshops for schools and organizations. In the Murray studio, those different tracks are all part of the same process: build carefully, solve problems early, and make the final experience feel seamless for the people who encounter it.
If you are meeting BrickCrafting through this post, this is the clearest introduction: a Murray studio full of ideas, a founder who leads from the build table, and a team of collaborators who help turn ambitious concepts into museum-scale reality. Ryan. Roxanne. Daniel. Bagel. Different strengths. Shared process. One brick-built mission. They are the people behind the custom LEGO® kits, the custom LEGO® instructions, and the bespoke LEGO® models for museum displays—and they are still building what comes next.
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Website: https://brickcrafting.com
Location: Murray, UT studio
Instagram: @brickcrafting
Information current as of June 2026.
Data subject to inventory fluctuation.
Building dreams into reality.
Status: Process Complete.
Status: Process Complete.
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