Think back to your childhood. What sort of toys did you play with? What sort of games did you play? Today was one of those days where we were taken back to childhood games with a vengence. Hopscotch - a bit of pavement and some chalk to mark out the squares and a pebble to throw . Bat and Ball. A ball thrown constantly at a wall much to my parents frustration who got fed up of the thud thud of the ball against the wall . Jigsaws , books to read , Roller skates . Cricket in the summer, Tennis in season and football in the winter . A piece of cardboard doubled up as a sledge in summer and a nearby bank used as a dry ski slope . And then there was Lego. Did you play with those primary coloured bricks, Instantly a recognisable, well known and successful Who around the world does not know about or has not played with Lego bricks? Who has not kept them for their children or grandchildren . How could you get fed up the thousands of different models you could construct from those tiny blocks with their iconic studs . Who remembers saving pocket money to buy the small boxes of bricks . Not enough to make a model but if you saved enough you could buy a box every week for about half a crown . Or bigger boxes for 10 shillings . Birthdays and Christmas time we asked for Lego . They were once produced in a factory down on our Industrial Estate but I remember them more in their new factory on the Ruthin Road in Wrexham. In the 1970s three large iconic bricks weighing in at 300kg once stood outside the factory as a reminder of what was being produced inside . The factory has long gone but the town has been fortunate to be able to stage the travelling exhibition of Lego models - Building Bricks in our small but functional and well equiped museum . The story of Lego goes back many years when a Scandavian carpenter designed them . The name was derived from the Danish for Play Well . I am sure many children of my generation remember the grey base plates we needed to sit the bricks upon . The windows, doors and trees that we could purchase . Lego moved with the times and took on the Star Wars theme - bricks used to build the Millenium Falcon . They never really lost their appeal . My love affair with the bricks began with that slab of grey studded and ready for bricks to be added. I bought windows, roof tiles , doors . My imagination could run riot . Designed in 1949 by Ole Kirk Christiansen a carpenter who obviously watched a lot of bricklaying the moulds were made to make the different shapes. Some two studded, others four or eight . 1720 . I could build a house today and a park tomorrow . Described as the toy of the century I was not going to dispute that. The exhibition was small but there was a description on the wall of the man who built the models . I forgot to read it but there were some snippets I do remember such as I think he was once in IT. He got fed up with his job and left it joining Lego and for reason started to build models which included these masterpieces . behind glass as Warrens work was obscured a little . I think his name was Warren Elsmore but forgive me if I got that one wrong . The light glaring off the glass made photographing the detail difficult . He built for fun for Lego and had produced many other displays most probably too large to fit into our small museum . The Coral Reef, the Pyramids the list of his achievements went on and on . Perhaps if we find ourselves in Beverley we could visit a different strand of his work as they too are housing an exhibition of Lego until September. The first baffled me . I could see it was a skeletal view of a church or a cathedral and was very modern with a large selection of bricks depicting stained glass extremely well . I then spotted the high altar and realised it was Coventry Cathedral with Christ in Majesty . All built of Lego bricks . The stained glass windows were stunning . There would have been a description somewhere but I found myself moving from exhibit to exhibit .