Wentworth Wooden Puzzles
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Company type | Private |
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Founded | Pinkney, Malmesbury, UK (1994) |
Founder | Kevin Wentworth Preston |
Headquarters | |
Area served | Worldwide |
Products | Wooden jigsaw puzzles |
Website | www |
The Wentworth Wooden Jigsaw Company (also known as Wentworth Wooden Puzzles) manufactures jigsaw puzzles with 'whimsical' shaped pieces reflecting the theme of the image portrayed on the puzzle. It was founded in 1994 by Kevin Wentworth Preston and is based in the village of Pinkney near Malmesbury, Wiltshire, an area of England known as the Cotswolds.
Company history
The venture was established on an existing dairy farm which was forced to diversify into other sources of income when milk production became uneconomical to sustain. Some of the old buildings were converted into industrial use, and the farm became an industrial estate housing many other traders, as well as the new puzzle enterprise.[1]
Technology
Traditionally jigsaws are manufactured using a thin flexible cutting blade driven by a motor known as a bandsaw. This method of cutting thin wood requires a degree of manual dexterity and patience to avoid spoiling the work. An alternative solution to this labour-intensive method of cutting intricate shapes in wood was required using modern technology solutions. The advent of the commercial medium-power Laser device has enabled many industries to use this tool to cut many different types of material speedily. The puzzle-manufacturing process uses a laser-cutting method invented and perfected by the founder, Kevin Wentworth Presto, in 1994.
Wentworth production can now focus on the quality of manufacture and design innovation that this new tooling provides. The high-speed production technique allows the small company to supply in excess of 150,000 puzzles a year to destinations in over 35 countries throughout the world.[2]
The design team produces each cutout style individually, most of the designs are unique "whimsy" jigsaw shapes. Whimsies are specially shaped pieces cut into puzzles "on a whim" by Victorian-era hand cutters, an era when jigsaw puzzles became a popular pastime. Wentworth retained this older style of manufacture, and is one of the remaining companies still producing puzzles using these Victorian techniques.[1]
'Whimsy pieces'
The ‘Whimsy’ laser-cut wooden puzzles feature unique, individual, “whimsical” cut-out shapes that reflect the theme of the image used on the face of the puzzle. All puzzles are supplied in a cotton draw-string bag within a lidded box. These wooden puzzles are cut from 3mm thick wooden boards (as opposed to softer cardboard) to ensure they will survive the rigours of use for a very long time. Puzzles are supplied to the customer with the option of an image of the puzzle's subject matter printed on the box. With no reference image there is the added difficulty of assembling the pieces into the correct pattern, and the element of surprise concerning the subject matter when the puzzle's image is reassembled.
- Manufacture: 3mm wooden board derived from sustainable managed forests.
- Features: rarely include corner pieces or two pieces of the same shape.
- 'whimsical' shapes: which reflect the theme of the image in all standard puzzles.
- Packaging: a cloth bag inside a sturdy box made from recycled material.
Styles
Traditional puzzles
All traditional puzzles include the unique whimsy pieces. Common sizes included are 100, 250, 500, 1,000 and 1,500 pieces.
Personalised puzzles
The ability to use a photograph or image design is a feature that Wentworth's puzzles make available in all the various sizes. Text may be added at the image creation process to include such messages as 'Happy Birthday' and 'Happy Anniversary' etc.
Difficult puzzles
The Tessellation puzzles range use jigsaw pieces in which all the pieces are almost all identical in pattern. Some utilise pieces shaped like animals, such as deer. Other subjects include repetitive plant shapes such as ivy and holly cuts.
Children's puzzles
Puzzles shapes and styles are designed to suit all ages and ability, including images specially suited for children, which are traditionally constructed with larger, more manageable pieces with simpler pattern and shape design. The company was awarded recognition for its production in this section of the market in 2008.[3]
References
- ^ a b Hart-Davis, Duff (1 August 1998). "The final piece of the Jigsaw". London: The Independent 1 August 1998. Retrieved 1 March 2011.
- ^ "Our firms are crying out for broadband". BBC news 2003. 7 May 2003. Retrieved 2 March 2011.
- ^ "Puzzle prize". Wilts and Gloucestershire Standard 19 October 2008. Retrieved 1 March 2011.
- http://books.google.com/books?id=MWQo2r0sFjEC&pg=PA176&dq=%22wentworth+wooden%22&hl=en&ei=jalqTZTpKsH68Aaa_fjICw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=3&ved=0CEMQ6AEwAg#v=onepage&q=%22wentworth%20wooden%22&f=false
- http://menmedia.co.uk/macclesfieldexpress/news/s/394/394009_what_a_guy.html
- http://www.newsweek.com/2009/07/18/the-corner-room.html
- http://www.telegraph.co.uk/family/5478432/The-puzzling-power-of-jigsaws.html
External links