Legendary 3,424-Brick Michael Jordan LEGO Poster Actually Bursts Out of Its Own Frame

There’s a photograph that has lived rent-free in the collective memory of sports culture for nearly four decades. Michael Jordan, ball palmed in his right hand, left arm trailing, legs split mid-air, frozen somewhere between the free-throw line and the rim during the 1988 Slam Dunk Contest. Nike turned it into a logo. Sneakerheads turned it into a religion. And somewhere along the way, the Jumpman silhouette stopped being a basketball image and became something closer to a universal symbol of human ambition, the visual shorthand for defying what should be physically possible. We’ve seen it screenprinted, embroidered, laser-cut, and tattooed. But rendered in 3,424 LEGO bricks, jutting out of a framed mosaic canvas at nearly 107 centimeters tall? This one has the visual authority of a gallery piece.

LEGO Ideas is the fan-driven platform where builders submit their own creations (MOCs, or My Own Creations, in the community’s vernacular) and the public votes on which ones deserve to become real retail sets. Hit 10,000 votes, and LEGO’s internal team formally reviews the submission for potential production. The community has produced some genuinely remarkable work over the years, but every so often something surfaces that feels less like a toy pitch and more like a legitimate design object. LAFS85’s Michael Jordan tribute is exactly that. It’s a relief sculpture, a mosaic, a framed poster, and a courtside diorama all collapsed into a single build, and it’s currently gathering momentum on the platform with a Staff Pick designation already in hand.

Designer: LAFS85

The central concept here is a relief sculpture mounted on a brick-built canvas, and the execution is what separates this from a standard LEGO Art mosaic. Rather than keeping everything flush and flat, LAFS85 has pushed Jordan’s figure forward off the background plane using layered brickwork, so the figure genuinely protrudes from the frame. The effect, especially in the front-facing renders, is arresting. Jordan looks like he’s mid-flight toward you, ball raised, and the bold pixelated “23” dominating the dark background behind him only amplifies the drama. The builder used SNOT (Studs Not On Top) techniques throughout the figure to capture the flow of the jersey fabric and the muscular geometry of the legs, which is exactly the kind of decision that an industrial designer notices and appreciates. Flat tile surfaces read as smooth fabric. Angled plates suggest tension in the limbs. The red and white of the Chicago Bulls uniform pops hard against the dark grey background bricks, and the brick-built recreation of Jordan’s signature in the lower corner is a genuinely lovely finishing touch.

My favorite detail, though, is the tiny courtside diorama that sits at the base of the frame. It’s a micro-scale hardwood court complete with the painted free-throw area in Bulls red, a custom Jordan minifigure dribbling on the baseline, and a beautifully proportioned basketball hoop with a transparent backboard and a weighted red stanchion. The scale contrast between the enormous relief portrait looming above and this tiny matchbook-sized court below is genuinely witty, and it gives the whole piece a kind of narrative arc. The legend on the wall, the player on the court, the moment suspended between the two. At approximately 89.6 centimeters wide, the full assembly is a serious statement piece, the kind of thing you’d actually want above your desk rather than tucked in a display cabinet.

LAFS85 describes the project as a fusion of 2D art and 3D sculpture, a tribute to the Jumpman spirit that honors the greatness of the player without leaning on external logos or licensed branding. That restraint is smart, both practically for LEGO Ideas approval purposes, and aesthetically because it keeps the focus on the craftsmanship rather than the IP. The build has already earned a Staff Pick designation from the LEGO Ideas team, which is a meaningful signal of quality, and it’s sitting at just over 2,059 supporters with 564 days remaining to reach the 5K milestone on the way to the full 10,000 votes needed for an official LEGO review. The only thing I’d wish for in a retail version is an alternate colorway, a black and pinstripe away-jersey variant would make this an absolute must-buy twice over. Until then, head to the LEGO Ideas page and cast your vote here.