Last year
I joined the Karakuri Club.
Last
Christmas I became a very big fan of the Karakuri Club.
The
Karakuri Club is run by the Karakuri Creation Group – a group of craftsmen producing a wide variety of puzzle boxes under a
communal banner. After you’ve paid a joining fee (Y 6,000 or c.£50), you pay an
annual subscription (Y 12,000 or c.£100) which gets you a handsome booklet with
photographs and brief descriptions of all they’ve produced over the last few
years – handy for compiling a wish list! Your subscription also gives you a
Christmas present from one of their craftsmen – and you get to express your
preference for which craftsman you’d like. You can then add to your
subscription (Y 10,000 or c.£83) and increase the number of Christmas presents
you receive and nominate additional craftsmen … and there’s just one catch –
you pay up in the first half of the year and have no idea what you’re going to
get at the end of the year – chances are good you’ll probably get a work from
the craftsman you’ve chosen, but you don’t know what he’s going to be producing
this year … sure you can look back at their past works and get an idea of their
styles and the sorts of things they’re likely to produce, but there’s no
guarantee that your guess will be anywhere near the eventual outcome! In fact,
if your choice turns out to be too popular, you might not even get something
from your preferred craftsman – you’ll get something from one of the others …
if that sounds a bit hit-and-miss, and you’d rather be totally in control of
what puzzles you buy, fine – perhaps the Karakuri Club isn’t for you – unless
of course you want to make use of the Club discount on all of their products
and be able to buy special limited Karakuri boxes that aren’t yet / won’t be
available to the general public – so there really is something for everyone.
Right, back to last year then – I joined up and decided that I’d just dip my
toes in the water and only go for four puzzles :-) – I selected my four
craftsmen and included Kamei (you can’t go wrong with a Kamei!), Iwahara
(someone who comes up with Box with a Tree and Byway Secret, not to mention
King-Cubi, is going to be interesting), Kawashima (his cubes look really interesting!)
and Tajima
(who produces presents based on the Chinese zodiac, and this year is the Year
of the Water Dragon!).
I duly
received my booklet and spent a while trawling through it and making a mental
wish list, and then promptly didn’t go and exercise my Club discount at all
last year – what a waste, eh? The booklet is a great reference source for
anyone interested in their work I’ve found it handy from time to time to check
up on sizes or differences between versions of a particular puzzle…around the
middle of the year, the Club gets in touch with everyone to confirm their
selection of craftsmen and give them one last chance to change or expand their
selection – their organisation is excellent!
…and then
nothing happens for about 6 months … until a couple of weeks before Christmas
when I notice a little speculation on the Renegades forum about when the
Christmas presents are likely to arrive, and sure enough, right on cue they
begin arriving all around the world just in time for Christmas – so Gill hijacks
the package and puts everything under the tree for me, and on Christmas morning
I get to open four surprising new Karakuri puzzles – tremendous!
There are
some incredible pictures of the logistics involved in packing and shipping
these puzzles around the globe on the Karakuri blog over here.
It turned
out that I got three out of my four picks – and one from a craftsman I wasn’t
expecting, however I will definitely be asking for one of his presents next
year! [That’s one of the nice outcomes of the way the Karakuri guys organise
this – you might find yourself exposed to some new styles that you wouldn’t
necessarily have tried yourself … and sometimes that means you stumble across
something really nice!]
Akio Kamei produced the Rotary
Box as his present – it’s a handsome, if not reasonably plain-looking puzzle
box made in lovely walnut wood. The side panels of the cube have some
interesting patterns that might lead you to believe that the panels slide in a
certain orthogonal manner, and while there’s a clue in the name, they move
altogether differently to how I was expecting. You need to work out how the
different panels interact and how that might be helpful, and there are a couple
of dead ends unusual twists along the way, ensuring this is not a simple
sequential set of moves where each one opens up the next one and so on…when you
do open the box there’s a fair amount of space in there for anything you might
like to pop in there… an unexpected and interesting little puzzle.
Hiroshi Iwahara produced a
variation of his Secret Base puzzle and called it Secret Base 2. There’s a very
clear family resemblance and trying the obvious move if you’ve seen the first
one, is a good start, but the family resemblance stops there… and it becomes a
different little beastie. While there aren’t a lot of moves in the solution,
they’re rather nicely hidden and I found myself setting this one aside and then
coming back to it a couple of times to try something else before I chanced upon
the right combination and sequence – definitely a worthy refinement of the
original.
Hideaki Kawashima has been
experimenting with variations on this particular theme for a while and Twin was
his Christmas 2011 variation. Ostensibly this is a cube with two panels on each
face, half of which are light and the rest are dark wood. Some of them move
separately and some don’t – some sides are all the same colour and some aren’t …
and those are all clues in solving the puzzle … as is the name (which you don’t
know when you first get it, by the way) which also alludes to the fact that
there are two panels that can be opened, each giving access to half of the
innards.
Each side take about 5 moves to open and every puzzler I’ve given it
to (including myself) has found themselves in the self-same dead end – the
design is such that we all run toward the solution at full tilt and merrily
miss what should have been (one of) the finishing posts … however, having done
that, we’ve all ensured that the box is thoroughly locked up! This is a great
little puzzle for puzzlers and neophytes alike – with an obvious trap for the
puzzlers that will confound them for a while! Once this box is open, the
insides are a wonderful sight! The amount of work in there and the fine
tolerances are staggering – it’s hard to believe that you’ve effectively only
paid £80-odd, for something that clearly has a huge amount of work in it!
The last
puzzle I got was the one I wasn’t expecting – it’s called Pump and comes from Tatsuo Miyamoto. It looks
like an old-fashioned hand-operated pump with the majority of its guts hidden
inside the box on the bottom. Miyamoto often makes unusual looking puzzles and
is particularly fond of making puzzles in forms where the puzzle mechanism is
something that the article itself would be doing, e.g. his Latch Box requires
manipulation of the turn-buckle and latch as you might in real life with a metal
latch.
The handles of the pump move up and down in a see-saw fashion and a bit of prodding around on the box shows a spring-loaded panel on the base. This box actually comes with a suggestion that you play with the puzzle on a flat surface – and the base notably has three angled sections to it – which is a handy clue to the likely movements. Solving the puzzle does involve playing in different planes while exercising the pump and there’s a delightful reveal when the final move required releases a drawer in the base that flings itself open. Very cute and way-out-of-the-ordinary little puzzle – and I think I need to ask for a Miyamoto this year from the start.
The handles of the pump move up and down in a see-saw fashion and a bit of prodding around on the box shows a spring-loaded panel on the base. This box actually comes with a suggestion that you play with the puzzle on a flat surface – and the base notably has three angled sections to it – which is a handy clue to the likely movements. Solving the puzzle does involve playing in different planes while exercising the pump and there’s a delightful reveal when the final move required releases a drawer in the base that flings itself open. Very cute and way-out-of-the-ordinary little puzzle – and I think I need to ask for a Miyamoto this year from the start.
… last year I joined the Karakuri Club for the first time – this year I’ve
already signed up again and I’m telling everyone who’ll listen what a great
thing it is…
If you'd like to see some pics of the boxes open - which may spoil some of the fun, follow the link...
Kamei Rotary Box
Miyamoto's Pump
(after the first move)
Ooooh secret base 2 looks very interesting as I've always loved the original and finally managed to get one last year :-D Wouldn't mind a look at that at MPP5 if that's ok with you Allard???
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...then it shall be there sir! (and I'll bring the others as well... :-) ) - allard
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