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Perhaps someone can make some corrections to the opening section. The first puzzles were not painted on rectangular boards nor were they cut with jigsaws. The first puzzles were published maps that were glued to boards, not necessarily rectangular, they were often irregularly shaped to follow the outline of the country being cut. They were known as "dissections" and were hand cut with fret saws. The term jigsaw did not come into popular use until the 1870s and it referred to a foot-powered saw. I know of no example of a puzzle being labeled as a Jigsaw Puzzle prior to that time. Jill Shefrin's research for her book (Such Constant Affectionate Care, copyright Cotsen Family Library,2003) uncovered a French woman, Mme de Beaumont, who was working as a tutor in London and was charging her students one-half guinea for their geographical wooden maps. Mme de Beaumont was almost certainly using dissected maps while John Spilsbury was still a young man and had not yet completed his apprenticeship.
It also should be noted that while many, many websites mention John Spilsbury as the inventor of what we now know as jigsw puzzles, almost none of these sites credit Linda Hannas for publishing that information.
Joe S. www.icollectpuzzles.com


==Jigsaw Puzzle Accessories==
==Jigsaw Puzzle Accessories==
Hi, I'm new to writing in Wikepedia and I will be grateful if you folks will help get me off on the right foot.....
Hi, I'm new to writing in Wikepedia and I will be grateful if you folks will help get me off on the right foot.....

Revision as of 22:34, 30 August 2008

Perhaps someone can make some corrections to the opening section. The first puzzles were not painted on rectangular boards nor were they cut with jigsaws. The first puzzles were published maps that were glued to boards, not necessarily rectangular, they were often irregularly shaped to follow the outline of the country being cut. They were known as "dissections" and were hand cut with fret saws. The term jigsaw did not come into popular use until the 1870s and it referred to a foot-powered saw. I know of no example of a puzzle being labeled as a Jigsaw Puzzle prior to that time. Jill Shefrin's research for her book (Such Constant Affectionate Care, copyright Cotsen Family Library,2003) uncovered a French woman, Mme de Beaumont, who was working as a tutor in London and was charging her students one-half guinea for their geographical wooden maps. Mme de Beaumont was almost certainly using dissected maps while John Spilsbury was still a young man and had not yet completed his apprenticeship.

It also should be noted that while many, many websites mention John Spilsbury as the inventor of what we now know as jigsw puzzles, almost none of these sites credit Linda Hannas for publishing that information. 

Joe S. www.icollectpuzzles.com


Jigsaw Puzzle Accessories

Hi, I'm new to writing in Wikepedia and I will be grateful if you folks will help get me off on the right foot.....

I have a commercial interest in Jigsaw puzzle accessories but I am also a lifelong jigsaw puzzle enthusiast. I have written a page on jigsaw puzzle accessories and also included a short paragraph in Jigsaw puzzles that points to the page that I have written. I believe I have presented a neutral point of view but I will be grateful for your opinions and any suggestions for improvements. Many thanks. ColinKing 15:11, 19 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]


Cutting Styles of Jigsaw Manufacturers

At the Jigthings website there is a page that illustrates the styles of wooden and cardboard jigsaw cutting used by 20 different jigsaw manufacturers - see http://www.jigthings.com/t-cutting-styles-of-jigsaw-manufacturers.aspx. The illustrations show sections of completed jigsaw puzzle in which the edges of the pieces have been enhanced so that the reader can clearly see the different cuts employed. As far as I know this is the only serious attempt to compare cutting styles of leading manufacturers by the use of photographic images. I have an interest in Jigthings and, being new to Wikepedia, I don't want to be accused of being biased and therefore I will not add a link to the jigsaw page at this time. However, if some of you long-standing Wikipedians think that the site is relevant and a valuable addition to the jigsaw article then please feel free to reference it! Alternatively, if you think that the link should NOT be added then please be kind enough to let me have your views. Many thanks ColinKing 13:26, 17 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]


Draw Backs to Recent Technology

Laser and water jets always remove some material - it's unavoidable. This results in a loose fit with all the surrounding pieces. Please point out the errors in this - if you can't then please leave it alone ! Gciesek 01:16, 3 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Lasers can be focused down to spot sizes of microns, I find it hard to believe your assertion. Perhaps if you had a reference to back it up? --Chuck Sirloin 17:35, 3 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Perhaps laboratory lasers, but not inexpensive industrial CO2 lasers such as the puzzle cutters use. They are anywhere from 100 to 400 microns (75 microns is the thickness of a human hair) Look into it - http://www.parallax-tech.com/faq.htm#cut . In any event material is certainly burned away both inside the spot of the beam and some of the surrounding material as well. It also has the unpleasant side effect of creating toxic fumes. Traditional die cutting removes absolutely nothing - it is simply impossible to get a closer cut. --User:Gciesek 17:49, 3 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Inappropriate Links...

Mr. Sirloin and Mr. WriterListener

You both seem intent on leaving two inappropriate links to commercial sites and yet deleting all others. Perhaps you can explain this. Do you each have some affiliation with these sites ?

Also the following sentence makes absolutely no sense in the section Puzzle Pieces.

"Bigger puzzles commonly are also divided into two or more sections, sometimes rotated against each other, that were cut with the same standard-sized die."

Yes, larger puzzles are cut in multiple sections. Perhaps you can explain what "sometimes rotated against each other, that were cut with the same standard-sized die." means. It is not a logical sentence.

User:Gciesek 23:30, 2 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I do not have affiliations with either website. As far as the sentence goes, it makes sense to me. If you want a puzzle that is twice as big as your die, you cut it in two sections and to keep the sections from being a complete repeat, you rotate the second section die cut 180 degrees from the first one. It could maybe be written better though. --Chuck Sirloin 17:37, 3 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]

You obviously have not had practical experience doing this - we have. All that is necessary is that the portion having the puzzle cuts be on an outside edge when being cut with the cutting die. Absolutely, nothing has to be rotated or turned around. As I said previously - I have practical experience with this. --Gciesek 17:43, 3 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I is great with kids

Removed...

I removed the sentence " This is a fairly rare practice today, but was more common at a time when puzzles were more of a novelty." because it has no factual basis. There are no sources listed, and personally I know several people who do it as a hobby. It doesn't belong in the article.


The French term for jigsaw puzzle is "casse-tête" and the Spanish term is "rompecabezas", both meaning "break-head", referring to the imputed difficulty of solving.

I'm removing this sentence because as far as I can tell from the respective language Wikipedias (fr, es), both of these words are more general and refer to any type of puzzle (the pages reference tangrams, Rubik's Cube etc.) They make clear that the French and Spanish for "jigsaw puzzle" are both "puzzle" (fr, es). Moreover I don't know (and Wikipedia doesn't link) any other French/Spanish word to mean "(more general) puzzle". -- Blotwell 01:50, 22 Apr 2005 (UTC)

I've heard French people use case-tete (Parisians anyway, that's who taught me) to describe both general puzzles and the jigsaw variety.

-Mr. Tachyon

I removed the sentences relating to a puzzle found at timtang.com. It felt like an advertisement for his site and didn't seem to contribute any significant information about jigsaw puzzles. Willoh 06:06, 26 June 2007 (UTC)[reply]


I Q the "around 1760" bit. I've seen the first jigsaw dated to 1762. Can we get a more accurate date? Trekphiler 07:02, 12 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]

The Parker Brothers page claims that they made the first jigsaw puzzle, which would place the date much later. The 1760's date sounds more plausible, but I have no source.

I've fixed the contradiction on the Parker Brothers page. no problemo! grrowl 06:05, 11 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Removed a request

This request was inserted into the body text of the article. I've moved it here:

Request: Would someone please add a section on (or a link to)what can be learned from doing puzzles? E.g. it gives one better spatial sense, it facilitates the brain moving info from one side to the other, it helps one better identify shades of color, recognize patterns. Thanks.

--Brandon Dilbeck 03:27, 20 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Uncommon practice?

The article says "It is possible to glue completed puzzles to a backing for permanent display. This is a fairly rare practice today, but was more common at a time when puzzles were more of a novelty." Is this true? In Hungary (where jigsaw puzzles are common) this is by no means a rare practice, and indeed, even specific puzzle glues are available for purchase. (They are mostly made in Germany and Italy, so I assume gluing puzzles together is not so rare in those countries, either...?)

By the way, puzzles these days are glued together not on the back (to something, as the article suggests), but on the front. (There is even puzzle glue for puzzles with a metallic finish so that the - transparent - gluing doesn't react chemically to the finish.)

I can add details on gluing jigsaw puzzles together, but I'd like to know how much of a "worldwide view" I have...

--prezzey 00:56, 29 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

In my entire puzzle solving experience, most puzzlers I've met in Canada do not glue their puzzles for a permanent art piece. Instead they break them down again for later solving, or give them away. One family I know does a puzzle circle, sending puzzles on to another family member until it get back to the one who sent it first. It would have to be a particularly striking puzzle to be immortalized like that in my home. At the same time, if I liked a puzzle that much, I'd want to do it over again. Searching Google turns up hundres of ads for puzzle glue, and only a few sites of people who admit to gluing their puzzles. No conclusions there. This site: http://www.imaginatorium.org/shop/epoch.htm claims that at least one Japanese jigsaw maker includes mounting accessories in the box. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 74.122.93.214 (talk) 22:34, 16 February 2007 (UTC).[reply]

Conflict

Under Variations, one can read "currently the biggest commercially available size is 18,240 pieces." whereas it is also read "The worlds largest commercially available puzzle has 24,000 pieces" under Trivia. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 201.48.117.251 (talk) 20:29, 5 April 2007 (UTC).[reply]

Edited. Just be BOLD. Femto 13:30, 6 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Under the topic "Links" at least two of these links do not work.I do not know what do do with them.

  1. Jigsaw Puzzle Virtual Exhibit at the Elliott Avedon Museum & Archive of Games
  2. The First Jigsaw Ever Sold, from the British Library website

Returning one of the deleted external links.

Recently, two of the external links were deleted, with the reason that they didn't follow the WP:EL standards. Well, one of those links was one that I put up there almost 2 years ago, this being the first time it has been challenged. The reason seems to be that someone recently changed the link in order to add their own, obvious link-spam. Their link is directly to a business website with the intent purpose to sell their puzzle. My original intent with the link was to share our story of putting together what was then the world's largest commercially available jigsaw puzzle. But now, after 2 years, it is a page filled with comments and resources from around the world concerning the putting together of these exceptionally large puzzles. Included are even some references to the 24,000 piece puzzle for which the recently added link was advertising. But it is simply a very good resource for anyone attempting to take on this type of project, and I feel it qualifies under the category "Sites with other meaningful, relevant content that is not suitable for inclusion in an article." Hathawayc 06:26, 12 August 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I agree. The content is relevant to the topic at hand. If the main concern is that it's a COI for you to add it, I'll re-add it to the article. Editmaniac 07:56, 13 August 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Main concern is that it has no content that meets WP:EL rules, is a personal/vanity site, AND is an ad-delivery site. The fact that it was WP:COI just sealed the bargain. I've removed it again as serving no encyclopedic purpose and being spam, basically. DreamGuy 15:36, 13 August 2007 (UTC)[reply]
If we are talking about this link, I have to agree with DreamGuy. No offense to the websites' owners, but the link is a personal webpage, forum discussion, blog, ad served etc etc. It doesn't really contribute to the article, but it is also not about the world's largest puzzle. Not WP:EL in my opinion. --Chuck Sirloin 17:39, 13 August 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Hmmm... I guess I wasn't aware of the COI regulations. I went ahead and removed the ads; they weren't really paying much anyway. It just seems to be a shame to not let people find the resource when they are looking for ways to put together an extremely large puzzle. It has quite extensive advice and other's experiences, and I sure wish I had found something like that before we started. I'm also curious as to how it lasted for almost 2 years if it's against guidelines. I've seen several other links come and go, but no one has had a problem with this one until now. I'll leave it up to the community to decide, but it's a shame to exclude it, I think.Hathawayc 02:01, 15 August 2007 (UTC)[reply]
The fact that you are campaigning for its inclusion is indicative of the COI problem. Again, this is not a personal attack in anyway. --Chuck Sirloin 18:37, 15 August 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Merge from Puzzle globe

The article Puzzle globe has a merge tag pointing here, which was added April 2007. I expanded the article a bit, and I think it can stand alone by now (compare the previous version to the current version. If noone opposes I'll remove the tag within a week. Waldir talk 23:54, 15 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Sounds right to me. RedSpruce 10:59, 16 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Oh yea, I forgot to mention: I have to give props to RedSpruce for his previous expansion, which added most of the current content of the article :) Waldir talk 20:57, 16 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Go for it — Jack · talk · 03:23, Saturday, 17 November 2007

I agree with Jack —Preceding unsigned comment added by 91.105.46.204 (talk) 17:17, 19 March 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Wasgij

What would be the most appropriate place to mention the "wasgij" puzzles by Falcon? Are they notable enough to warrant a separate page, or should Wasgij be a redirect to this page? --Slashme (talk) 09:25, 29 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I've made wasgij a redirect to this page in the meantime. --Slashme (talk) 07:27, 9 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Can someone add please about developmental milestones

ie. when children are expected to be able to complete 2, 3 12, 36 puzzles etc. I would be very interested. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 69.119.152.47 (talk) 16:10, 6 March 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Force required for cutting

The article states that 700 tons of force are required to cut a 1000-piece puzzle, though a ton is a measure of mass, not force. It would be interesting to learn of the actual amount of force (ideally in Newtons) required and of the surface area of the blades' contact with the card, thus enabling us to establish the amount of pressure required. JPBarrass (talk) 03:37, 21 March 2008 (UTC)[reply]

information required

I have question about the puzzleball in the image,where did you find it ? I am puzzle maniac,will be happy to buy and complete it.

Thank You. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Ablavanya (talkcontribs) 20:11, 29 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]