Sunday, October 10, 2010

Wild dogs of Roy De Forest



I count ten "Country Dog Gentlemen" in this splashy picture (click on the pictures for a detailed look). Very fun to assemble, with sections so uniquely colored that I could pick out the correct pieces from a pile just by eyeballing them. De Forest is called a "humorous figuration" artist; he taught at UC Davis from 1965-1982.

This is another Pomegranate puzzle—I love this line of jigsaw puzzles. The cardboard is really substantial, the pictures are fun, and, wow, do the pieces snugly interlock.

Sadly, Jiggy Jr. has returned to the hallowed halls of higher education; thus, I no longer have a jigsaw buddy or blog master. This is the first time I've created an entire blog posting on my own, including transferring photos from camera to computer. But Jiggy taught me well! Queen of the Cabin in the Woods will soon leave the beauty and solitude of the Woods to join us here in civilization; she's a much better puzzler than me (has more patience with hard puzzles, for one thing). Jiggy must have inherited her patience from the Queen.

Jigsaw trivia: National Jigsaw Puzzle Day is January 29th!

In fully interlocking solidarity,
Jigsaw Maniac

Loose lips sink ships—keep busy with jigsaw puzzles

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Charley Parker: now you see it, now you don't






















Loved this Charley Parker puzzle by Pomegranate. Whimsical design, sturdy pieces that are the very definition of "interlocking," discrete images that are challenging but straightforward to assemble. But the real joy came upon completion. Turn the puzzle upside down? The beaver's pond turns into the Rocky Mountains (the title of the puzzle), an unidentifiable object (at the top of the puzzle on the left, on the bottom of the puzzle on the right) became a chipmunk, and shadows morphed into deer heads (see the dark brown, shadowy area around the light brown tear-drop shaped objects that cross the puzzle, one-third of the way down or one-third of the way up, depending on which position the puzzle is in—be sure to click on the images to see the details). What fun!

Jigsaw trivia: This blog has highlighted examples of jigsaw puzzle imagery on book covers, to signal something meaningful about the book. Jigsaw imagery and activity is everywhere, though. The symbol for autism is the jigsaw puzzle, which represents the complexity of the condition. One jigsaw puzzle manufacturer dedicates a portion of its profits to autism research. Another makes special jigsaw puzzles for people with Alzheimer's.

In fully interlocking solidarity,
Jigsaw maniac

Loose lips sink ships—keep busy with jigsaw puzzles

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Upon my stars ☆

OMG. I just discovered the American Jigsaw Puzzle Society! Darn—*I* wanted to start an American Jigsaw Puzzle Society (although my name for it would have been something like Jigsaw Puzzle Lovers of the World—Unite).

Where do you fit in the AJPS typology of the jigsaw puzzle community? Here are the three categories of jigsaw puzzlers identified on the AJPS website: casual puzzlers (they can take 'em or leave 'em), regular puzzlers (they enjoy puzzling very much but don't do it all the time, mostly confining their puzzling activities to cold, dreary months), and the Truly Dedicated Jigsaw Puzzle People, described thusly:

"These are the people for whom assembling jigsaw puzzles is a serious hobby. When there are jigsaw puzzle competitions, they go, and they compete. Generally, they're lovely folks, but there are a few fanatics out there who take jigsaw puzzles perhaps a bit too seriously. To illustrate, I once took a phone order from a man for an expensive 13,200-piece puzzle. He had to have it shipped to his friend's home, where he was staying temporarily, because he'd just been evicted from his apartment. "

You can find me between regular and truly dedicated. I'm a passionate puzzler but still go to my job, spend time with my family, and have a permanent residence!

In fully interlocking solidarity,
Jigsaw maniac

Loose lips sink ships—keep busy with jigsaw puzzles

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Eat, play, jigsaw puzzles




I ♥ jigsaw puzzles, signed, fat cat

Jiggy Jr. and I had a marvelous little vacation in Santa Cruz last week (it's not Rome, it's not India, it's not Bali, but we take our vacation pleasures where we can). When we travel we love to visit good bookstores. I love jigsaw puzzles and my family tolerates them but books are our holy grail. Jiggy Jr., DataDad and I read voraciously and we worship well-stocked, eclectic, non-chain bookstores (all hail Powells; a moment of silence for Cody's). In this vein, Jiggy Jr. and I spent hours at Bookshop Santa Cruz—truly one of the best West coast independent bookstores.

After luxuriating for a few hours in my favorite sections (brand-new edgy novels by unknown authors! a huge section on healthy cooking! more books than can be consumed in a life time on mindful living and positive mental outlooks!) I turned a corner and lo-and-behold, there sat before me a large table chockful of jigsaw puzzles! There were jigsaw puzzles on the bottom shelf and jigsaw puzzles on the table top. I parked myself there and studied puzzle after puzzle (could not contain myself: I bought five, after a full hour of serious contemplation—see fat cat with puzzles, above).

The neat news is my discovery of a new jigsaw puzzle designer/manufacturer: new for me, anyway: Pomegranate Artpiece. Their puzzles are eye-candy: beautiful images, not tacky—and, it turns out, made on unusually hearty cardboard stock which makes it fun to work with. I'm starting with a Charley Harper image, "The Rocky Mountains," which I'll post upon completion.

In fully interlocking solidarity,
Jigsaw maniac

Loose lips sink ships—keep busy with jigsaw puzzles

Sunday, September 5, 2010

The cosmos of jigsaw culture

Kari Peterson, Davis, California media expert, brought these beautiful covers of Community Media Review to my attention. (The "Global Policies, Global Connections" cover [volume 29:4] was designed by Scott Alumbaugh, also of Davis. No info on the designer of "Community Media Board Development.") The covers for Silent Racism and Circles of Exclusion exemplify the pervasive cultural thread of the puzzle.


In a galaxy far, far away . . .

Jiggy Jr. put this together. She is a Star Wars
fanatic. Character by character, she assembled: Luke, Leia, Darth (Vader, Maul, or Sidius, take your pick), Boba Fett, Taunwii, Padme, Ki Adi Mundi—you name it, she knows it. (For the full effect, double click on each picture; you can see the characters in satisfying detail.)

Can you find Luminara?








I sense a disturbance in the force . . .








In fully interlocking solidarity,
Jigsaw Maniac

Loose lips sink ships—keep busy with jigsaw puzzles

Saturday, September 4, 2010

A three-family vacation puzzle!

What a glorious puzzle—hard and so beautiful. We started this when we were in Montana--Jiggy Jr., Jiggy Jr.'s grandmother, Queen of the Cabin, and I. Hopefully, the detail of this puzzle shows—too tough for me. I tried, but this is one of those puzzles (1,000 tiny pieces) where I struggle for hours to assemble one square inch. Needless to say, we did not finish it during our visit.

But grandmother persisted and over the course of two more families' visits (one contingent from Nevada and one from Texas) to the cabin, the puzzle was completed. Photo, courtesy of the almighty matriarch—thank you! It is wondrous to behold. Nothing like an absorbing puzzle to keep people occupied on vacation (that is, when they're not taking a boat ride on the magnificent river, looking for bears and moose, barbequing at the Gazebo, driving through the Glaciers: favorite activities when visiting the cabin in the woods).

Jigsaw trivia: Will Shortz, he of the crossword puzzle and Sudoku populizer, wrote his undergraduate thesis on "enigmatology": the study of the relationship between puzzles and culture (the full story). Perfect!

In fully interlocking solidarity,
Jigsaw maniac

Loose lips sink ships—keep busy with jigsaw puzzles