Artist: unknown
Made: in China
Count: 62 pieces
Final size: 6 x 6″
Piece Type/Variety: Random, very high variety
Piece quality: Excellent
Skin irritation: None
I wasn’t really planning to do this puzzle yesterday as well, but my husband said “show them your crazy wooden puzzle that’s all zig-zaggy”
so I brought it out and my friends were immediately intrigued. Three of us assembled it together. So I have no progress shots as we didn’t pause. When I do it again by myself, I’ll take some. I’m curious if it is possible to assemble it in a variety of ways, because otherwise I don’t know what infinite in the title means. Although it seems like it would only go together one way around the edge- it’s a panel with the whole puzzle fitting into this inset shape.
Wasn’t quite as tricky as I expected, though my friend readily pointed out how absolutely unique the pieces were, that actually makes it easier to see where they go. At least, after you have a good amount of it fitted together. If we’d had a bunch of them flipped the wrong way I think it would be harder. But there’s burn marks on the reverse side that we could tell
and got most of them flipped the same way to start off. (Yes there’s some pieces that still look burn-marked in places in this completed picture- they were worse on the other side, but it does make me think this would fit together more than one way, if we did have them flipped to the reverse… ) A nice challenge overall.
2 Responses
Wow that is a crazy puzzle, but really cool! I think infinite means the design once you’re finished. If I remember correctly, that kind of design? puzzle? is called infinite. Because it looks like the lines never end, I think?
I’m going to find out someday, when I do this one over again!