Showing posts with label pieces. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pieces. Show all posts

Saturday, November 27, 2010

Puzzle - never tried one with more than 24,000 pieces?

When I was twelve, I attended a party being held in a church basement. Five tables were set up in a row and each table had a brand new 500-piece jigsaw puzzle sitting in the middle of it. The adult in charge of the party divided us into 5 equal groups and on a signal, we were to open the boxes and try to fit as many of the pieces together as possible in 30 minutes. At the end of the 30 minutes, the group with the fewest left over pieces won.

We had a wonderful time. Some groups had a strategy and appointed one person to search for edge pieces, another for blue pieces, another for brown, etc., while one or two actually started working on putting the pieces together. Other groups were totally disorganized, calling out "Hey, I found a piece that looks like it belongs at the top," or "No fair, I wanted to work on the blue."

I don't remember what group won---it wasn't mine, but I do know that my love for working jigsaw puzzles was born at that party.

Jigsaw puzzles have been around for a long time. Most historians give a London mapmaker, John Spilsbury, credit for coming up with the concept around 1760 when he glued one of his maps on a piece of wood and cut it into pieces as a teaching tool in a geography class. Fellow teachers saw merit in the tool and requested similar puzzles so Spilsbury began to turn them out on a regular basis. His puzzle designs were limited to maps though, and it took several years before other puzzle makers started putting a variety of pictures on the wood before using a jigsaw to cut the pieces apart. Still, the process was slow and fairly expensive.

As the demand for jigsaw puzzles became greater, puzzle makers found ways to create large numbers of them at a time and to use cardboard rather than wood for the base. Today, commercial puzzles ranging from 25 pieces to 2500 pieces can be purchased for very nominal fees. Custom made puzzles are, and will continue to be, very expensive, but much in demand by puzzle working and puzzle collecting enthusiasts.

A friend of mine particularly likes Thomas Kinkade jigsaws with designs copied from his famous "light" paintings. Many of his puzzles also have unusually shaped pieces scattered throughout the puzzle. One of his puzzles I worked had about 25 little animal shaped pieces to fit into the design.

Three dimensional puzzles are also popular. My husband gave me a three-dimensional wooden puzzle cat is about 5 inches high and a beautiful decoration for your home, if it is put together. The same man, (actually I only have one), I also bought a three-dimensional puzzle of two-story house. I think that half of the pieces were almost identical, and after pulling my hair out trying to work for a few months, I finally got it together. I'm sure some of the pieces were in the wrong place,but I decided I had had enough and called it done. I asked my husband to please stick to flat puzzles for me in the future.

There are competing puzzle makers who claim to have created the world's largest, the world's smallest, the world's most unusual, and the world's most difficult puzzles. In some cases, the Guinness Book of Records agrees with these claims, but others are not so easy to prove.

Probably the greatest controversy is over the world's largest jigsaw puzzle. There are reports that a wooden puzzle weighing over 3.5 tons was once constructed in France, but my attempts to find evidence of its existence have failed.

In 2008, a claim was made and substantiated that a puzzle with over a million pieces had been put together in Ravensburg, Germany. 15,000 people took part in putting the puzzle together. Jigsaw puzzle purists, however, argue that the puzzle was actually made up of many, many smaller puzzles, put together in individual homes and carried to the town square where they were eventually pieced together to make a whole.

Probably the most recognized contender for the title of the world's largest jigsaw puzzle is a puzzle called, Life, made by Royce B. McClure. The puzzle has over 24,000 pieces and takes several months to complete. When finished, the puzzle measures 168 x 61 inches so you are going to need a big room if you plan to try it. As you have probably guessed, this puzzle isn't cheap so be prepared to invest between $250 and $350 depending on where you buy it. Real jigsaw puzzle lovers can easily justify the cost by looking at the size of the puzzle, the many, many hours of pleasure its construction will give them, and the pride they will have when they do put the last of those 24,000 pieces in place.

If you happen not to have ever put a jigsaw puzzle together, maybe now is a good time to start. The dire predictions concerning our economy should have us thinking about some low-cost activities the members of our family can do together. Maybe jigsaw puzzles, (not the expensive one described above), with their endless variety of pictures is just what your family needs. Once started on an unused table, you'll be surprised how often a child, or even you will stop by thinking of just adding a piece or two but end up still at it 20 or 30 minutes later. When that happens, you know you're hooked!

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Buy Jigsaw Puzzles in a Different Number of Pieces

Jigsaw puzzles are available in one hundred pieces, three hundred pieces, five hundred pieces, seven hundred and fifty pieces, and a thousand pieces. You can even buy one that are five thousand to twenty five thousand pieces. For a thousand piece jigsaw puzzle the normal layout is thirty eight pieces wide by twenty seven pieces long and with a total of one thousand twenty six pieces. Five hundred piece  puzzles are usually twenty seven pieces wide and nineteen pieces long.

Children's jigsaw puzzles come in all sizes ranging from five pieces in the shape of squares, circles, triangle and rectangles, or animals shapes, for toddlers, to one hundred pieces for older children. When you buy one for children they are normally rated for ages by the number and size of the pieces within them. The fewer and larger the jigsaw puzzles pieces, the younger the child who will be assembling the puzzle. Most of these types that are also made of durable materials that are easily cleaned.

The more pieces to a  puzzle, the more complex and time consuming it will be to assemble. To add to the complexity of a jigsaw puzzle, you an buy jigsaw puzzles that are double-sided. Double-sided jigsaw puzzles can be assembled from either side. This adds a level of complexity to the assembly process because the puzzle solver cannot be certain which side of the piece is correct for the side they are assembling. This requires extensive patience for the person solving them because there could be many trial and errors of assembling and disassembling the puzzle until they get the correct combination.

No matter what size jigsaw puzzle you purchase and begin to assemble, you will have hours or even days of relaxing entertainment. Solving a jigsaw puzzle can be one of the most relaxing experiences a person can do to forget about the stress of day-to-day life. 

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

100 pieces Jigsaw Puzzles

To help us stay alert and you need sharp, we constantly challenge our minds. One of the ways we can do is to solve puzzles and play some games that stimulate the brain of our help. Some of the most popular games to play we are the ones that simulate the mental game on TV, like Jeopardy. As for the puzzle, there are several types of puzzles, we can choose which, including the highly popular crossword puzzle. However, another popular stylePuzzle is the puzzle that can only stimulate our minds, but our other senses as well.

Types of Puzzle

The types of puzzles that are available on the market, ranging from relatively simple, and some of the most difficult to put together the most complex. That said, you should choose only imagine the kind of puzzle that best suits your needs. A very simple puzzle can not be used to challenge your mind. ToOn the other hand is a puzzle that a considerable amount of time and a considerable amount of energy you can steal the energy required to perform other necessary operations. Besides this, there can a puzzle in one sitting can be very frustrating to be objective, and could keep you distracted.

However, always an enigma, that's right for your free time you have and enough to challenge your mind would be a better idea. This wouldto get the best piece of the puzzle-100. This type of puzzles are easier to put together than the puzzle, the pieces are thousands, but a challenge that this offer is enough to puzzle our minds helps us to work one day of intense spiritual.

Where to find 100 pieces puzzle

In addition to traditional destinations such as department stores and specialty stores, there are other sources of 100 itemsPuzzle. A very cheap source is the Internet, the Office may be able to download and print a puzzle piece-100 from the comfort of your house or yours.

Play games and solve puzzles can help us psychologically, your mind sharp and focused. This is because we provide a way to reach our minds, help us to other tasks in a better way of challenge. A good example is the piece Jigsaw Puzzle-100, theoffers a "simple" way to solve a puzzle and a decent amount of mental challenge.