LEGO is just a few hundred votes away from considering creating a Highland cow Lego set – and its designer hopes to get it over the line in time for a very special milestone.

Tom Prest, a software engineer, built the Highland cow model over a year ago as a demonstration for a "build an animal week" at a school Lego club he ran in Milngavie.

His cow, named Hamish McBreige, features adjustable horns and uses a Lego croissant for the tip of the tail.

READ MORE: Singer Charlotte Church endorses The National's urgent Gaza aid fundraiser

Prest told The National: "I had some plans for building a stag or something, and it wasn't going very well.

"I decided to build a different kind of animal, and looked around our flat, where my fiancee has filled it with various Highland cow themed things.

"And I was like, I should totally build a Highland cow!"

Prest's fiancee has long been supportive of his Lego building, and encouraged him to buy his first Lego set when he rediscovered it around a decade ago.

The National: If Prest's design passes 10,000 votes, Lego will consider turning it into a real set you can buy on shelvesIf Prest's design passes 10,000 votes, Lego will consider turning it into a real set you can buy on shelves (Image: Tom Prest)

He said building the Highland cow, something he's never seen done before, came with some challenges.

"The sides, with the hairy effect, were the first thing I had in my mind when I decided to build it.

"But when I added a head it was too big for the body, and when I built a new body it was too big for the head."

After finalising the design, Prest took the model to various Lego shows, including the Edinbrick festival in Edinburgh, where it was met with rave reviews.

Seven months ago, he decided to add the design to Lego Ideas, a platform used by the toy company to find new designs.

Prospective designs need 10,000 votes to be considered for conversion into a Lego set – and Prest's sits at exactly 9400.

He has 573 days to gather the remaining 600 votes, but for him, there's a personal target that brings that total much lower.

"We want to get to the 10,000 sooner because we're getting married in two weeks, and I really want to get it before the wedding.

The National: Prest and his fiancee – he hopes to get the design over the line in time for his upcoming weddingPrest and his fiancee – he hopes to get the design over the line in time for his upcoming wedding (Image: Tom Prest)

"I don't always have the best confidence in the things I create, so even just to get 10,000 supporters would be amazing.

"The small percentage of revenue wouldn't go amiss either, for a newly married couple."

The Lego Ideas listing describes the design as "a great way to show your Scottish pride in Lego form".

It adds: "The build itself is a perfect blend of accuracy and cuteness, with posable horns, a deceptively simple technique used for the fluffy coat, and even a croissant for the tip of the tail!"

Prest, who has lived in Scotland since 2011, has created two other Lego creations themed around the country, which he shared on his Instagram page.

The National: Tam crosses the Brig o' Doon, pursued by a witchTam crosses the Brig o' Doon, pursued by a witch (Image: Tom Prest)

One, created for Robert Burns's birthday, shows Tam from the poet's Tam o' Shanter being pursued over the Brig o' Doon by a witch.

Another is a stylised Saltire built from Lego, showing a cloudy cross over a blue backdrop.

The National:

The cow's name came from suggestions from supporters of the design on the Lego Ideas website – "Hamish" comes from its common use as a Scottish given name, and "McBreige" comes from the Gaelic breige, meaning brick.

Users on the Lego Ideas website have hailed the creation, with one commenter writing: "No I don’t care if he’s made of Lego. I will snuggle him if it’s the last thing I do."

Another said: "How is this not already a thing? It must happen!"

The design was also a staff pick from the website's administration in August.

If you'd like to help the Highland cow design to be considered by Lego, you can vote HERE