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I keep reading on various lego web sites about an elusive brick color called "bley" or "blay". What is it and what is the story behind this?

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    Sounds like it's in the same color family as grue and bleen.
    – Dori
    Oct 27, 2011 at 1:41
  • @Dori also whack and blite, purkle, salmindrift, viollo, bright pinkish cucumber blue, and chucknorris. Apr 1, 2019 at 1:26

2 Answers 2

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Around 2004 (if I remember correctly) LEGO changed the grey and dark grey colors. The colors before the change were the original grey colors which were in use from their introduction. They were somewhat warmer than the colors today, which was perceived as looking faded, though it had nothing to do with aging. Part of the problem was that the competition (Megabloks) was using more blueish greys, which made the LEGO greys look old.

The newer colors have a colder, blueish tone, and were widely disliked in the AFOL community, because most of the time they look awful if used together with the existing old grey pieces. Depending on the lighting it can also be quite hard to tell old and new greys apart.

Hence the term "bley" is used as a name for the new blueish grey.

Bley and Old dark-grey
BrickShelf

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    I think at this point bley isn't really used in a derogatory way these days. It's just Lego's current grey, and is often used to divine the difference between the "old" gray and the new one.
    – Nathan
    Oct 27, 2011 at 13:36
  • Not to mention it's short and recognized by everybody.
    – Joubarc
    Oct 28, 2011 at 9:11
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    Ok, edited to remove "derogatory".
    – starblue
    Oct 28, 2011 at 9:56
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    The bley in the image above is what I'd call dark bley. The majority of the other bricks are grey and the 6x6 tile on the left is either light grey or light bley
    – Ambo100
    Oct 28, 2011 at 18:53
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At some point, LEGO changed three of its staple colors: light gray, dark gray and brown. This was but the latest on a long series of traumatic changes imposed by the Danish company, and some fans couldn't stand it any more.

While some vowed to never touch LEGO again and some didn't really care, the vast majority, who knew they couldn't fight their addiction if they wanted, decided for a more half-hearted protest approach that consisted of amalgaming "blue" and "grey" to name the new colors "bley". They hoped to show LEGO how much the new color induced nausea to them, but eventually grew accustomed to it. And it's not like they had a choice anyway.

More seriously, LEGO called the new colors "medium stone grey", "dark stone grey" and "reddish brown", while the fans named them "light bluish gray", "dark bluish gray" and "reddish brown". Then LEGO produced "light stone grey", just to confuse everyone, but to their defense, if you name something "medium", it sort of implies it's not the end of the scale, doesn't it?

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    Ironically, bley is much less stone-like than the warmer earlier tone, which is one of the reasons I dislike as a castle-theme-favoring builder. On the other hand, I think the color cast is just fine for my space stuff.
    – mattdm
    Oct 28, 2011 at 18:57
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    It supposedly fits better with the other colors. Which may just be legolese for "it's more shiny, so kids like it better"
    – Joubarc
    Oct 28, 2011 at 19:45

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