Monday, April 12, 2021

Pomegranate “Colourful Wild Owl” by Ningiukulu Teevee

Here's another puzzle that I laid out in my office at work and finished with the help of my friends and coworkers.  It's a 500 piece Pomegranate.  I went shopping on Zulily specifically for 500 pc puzzles because I thought they would be easier to complete as a group project.  The repetition of colors and patterns in the bird's feathers still kept this puzzle challenging.


The image's artist, Ningiukulu Teevee, is a Canadian Inuit artist, and I can just imagine these owls standing out against a stark winter landscape.  The drawing is copyright 2013 but the puzzle is current.  Its finished size measured 18x24 inches, an easy size to frame.  The pieces were large due to the relatively small piece count of the puzzle.  This would be a fun image to reproduce for a chalk festival. 


 

Sunday, April 4, 2021

Liberty "Hoppy Easter"

When I was working a full season of television I was able to treat myself twice to a Liberty Puzzles, a wooden jigsaw that is collector-level quality.  Due to demand during the Covid pandemic, to buy a Liberty puzzle one must go to their website and join a waiting list, then wait about six weeks for your name to come up  They send an email when it's your turn and you have 24 hours to make a purchase limited to a single item.  

For my purchase this spring, I chose an Easter themed puzzle.  I'll look forward to seeing these bunnies each year!  This is a 257 pc puzzle with a classic postcard theme.  It measures only 8.25x12.75 inches.  The fun thing about the Liberty brand is their whimsy pieces, and this puzzle was no exception.  There were easter eggs, a chick, and a bunny, in addition to the company's traditional whimsy shapes.  

I took this to work during Easter week and a co-worker friend of mine proceeded to put it together in an afternoon.  Even though for the most part I wasn't working it myself, it was fun to see it come together intermittently throughout the day!  I will do it all myself next year. 

 

Thursday, March 25, 2021

Laurel Ink “English Embroidery III”

This is a puzzle I picked up from a local trade group.  The image is taken from tapestry and the brown tonal colors took my breath away.  But I hung onto it for quite a while because it looked difficult - and I was right!  My work friends and I thought this was one of the most difficult puzzles we had done.  It was fun to collaborate together. 

Laurel Ink's "English Embroidery III" is a 500 piece puzzle, with a finished size of 18 x 24 inches.  It's copyright 2002.  The puzzle pieces were large and random-cut.  They fit tightly together.  I'd absolutely try out this brand again.




 

Monday, February 22, 2021

Pomegranate “Flower Cycle” by Rosalind Wise

From Nov 2020 thru April 2021, I had the good fortune to have a Key 2nd AD job on a network show with a truly fun and gracious crew.  We were on the CBS Radford lot, and I had an office in the main production office building.  My office was a large room with four desks, to serve my entire department.  But I was the only one there during the course of the shooting day; most of my department was on set from call to wrap and only used the office at wrap.  So I had a generous amount of room.   My job as the information collector for the day's filming plan, known as the callsheet, meant I had find all sources I could.  One of my techniques is to always have a puzzle in the works in my office.  Folks would come in for a few minutes at a time, to find a few pieces as a break, and I would get to talk with them, picking their brain for info on their manpower for the next day.  


There were a few specific key players in my office that liked to puzzle as much as I do - John, the APOC, Michaela, the Office PA, and Bryan, the Base Camp AD.  Between the four of us we finished at least six large scale puzzles over the season.  


This Pomegranate 1000 piece is one of the most colorful puzzles I've ever worked.  The micro detail made it possible for there to be many elements to the design, and made it extremely difficult to solve.  The back of the puzzle box talks about artist Rosalind Wise's work:  "The composition of the painting is based on a large elliptical spiral along which twines a garland of garden flowers and wildflowers.  The earliest of blooms, the snowdrop, appears at the center, around which circle spring and summer blossoms....in the order in which they flower."  This was a fun puzzle to complete because I got it secondhand.  Happily, it was complete.

The finished size of 25x20 inches required a custom frame which was costly.  I ordered the white wood finish from ArtToFrame.Com and waited several weeks for the order to be filled. 


Monday, February 15, 2021

“Poppies in Vase” by Olena Art

 

I picked up this 500 pc puzzle at a Tuesday Morning while on vacation in Nashville.  I thought its beautiful pastels would be easy to place.  I was completely wrong!  The nature of this watercolor image made it very difficult, even at a lower piece count.  I started this one day on vacation.  Managing to get the border and small pieces of the background done, I split them into sections that I laid into the box for transport home.  I then finished this at work with the help of colleagues there as a group project, spread over some time.  It was fun to live with the image for a while, coming back to it only once a week or so.  Each time I approached with fresh eyes a few more pieces made sense.  Still, it would have taken me even longer to complete this on my own.  It was fun to have the help working on it together!

 The brand is one I'd never heard before:  Americanflat.  Despite the brand name, the box was labeled Made in China.  It was reasonably priced at $6-8. 

Though the pieces were not thick or sturdy, they were tight enough to hold together during completion.  I used another piece of cardboard to flip the puzzle over and glued it for framing as artwork to hang in my office at work, a drab blank wall in need of some colorful but cheap art that I won't be too attached to when the job ends in just a few months.