[This blog post comes to you from somewhere off the Swedish
coast in the Baltic Sea ... if this works...]
...recently I’ve been on a bit of a Karakuri box
binge... it started out reasonably cheaply
when I picked up a New Secret Box III (among a number of other nice little
puzzles from Japan) for a smashing price.
On the outside it’s a reasonably handsome looking box with
three stripes on it (for III – the other versions have one and two stripes
respectively). It’s a fairly simple box conceptually – each panel needs to be
moved, in the right order, all around the box ... and you need to work your way
around the box three times (hence III, again) – there are no particular tricks
to it as each panel successively unlocks the next, and so on, until the final
move releases the lid which then slides open.
Inside the box is a little thing of beauty! Wonderfully made
and a terrific introduction to Japanese puzzle boxes for anyone who hasn’t seen
one yet – the complexity of the pieces and their accuracy is a lovely thing to
behold...
I also picked up a Kamei Dice Box from Satomi – the price
was simply too good to resist adding one to the collection. I know there’s a
clue in the name but this one looks like a giant dice (die? Any pedants out
there?) except that the numbers haven’t quite been lined up properly – you know
– opposite sides don’t add to 7 ... how sad am I that that’s the first thing I
spot about this box?!
Turns out that’s vaguely useful ... he said, dropping in a
little clue ... I like the way this box opens –totally unique opening
mechanism.
Next up is a few boxes resulting from a recent Karakuri Club
email announcing some new puzzles... I opted for two of the new ones and a copy
of an older design that I hadn’t added to my collection yet.
Byway Secret 2 by Hiroshi Iwahara is not a new puzzle by any
measure but it is a classic! I’d had the pleasure of playing with a couple of
them in the past, but I thought I needed to have one in my own collection, so
given that I was going to be getting a couple of things from the Karakuri
folks, I added a copy to my order...
It starts out like a really simple puzzle box with the top
sliding open in a couple of moves ... except it’s a lot shallower than you’re
expecting it to be and there’s a raised plate on the bottom with some Japanese
writing on it... not sure if there’s a clue to the next move in that writing or
not, but some closer examination leads to the interesting twist that makes
Byway Secret a rather interesting little puzzle box ... and another 10 moves
sees the main compartment come open.
Ring Box by Hideaki Kawashima is a little gem – one of the
new boxes on offer, it’s made of ancient keyaki wood with a lovely green colour
to it and it literally looks exactly like a classic little ring box. There’s a
little card in the box that helpfully tells you that your goal is to remove the
ring ... and that actually is important as you might be tempted into thinking
that you’ve finished before you actually have... I was!
While this one looks like a ring box and all the visual
clues tell your brain that it should open like a normal ring box – it won’t.
(Yip, first thing I tried!) Hunting around you’ll find that in a couple of
moves you can open the top and see a ring nestling inside. (Yip, it looks like
a traditional ring box in there!) I was tempted to think that I’d finished –
until Neil pointed out that the ring was held firmly in place and it wasn’t
budging!
Cool ... I like that – little bit of a teaser ... set back
to work again and a few more moves and the ring is now released...
I really like this little box – especially the fact that it
teases you in the middle like that ... gives you a sniff of victory and then
makes you try harder...
The other new puzzle is a fresh design from Akio Kamei
called Three Sticks. The web-site’s description explains that the craftsman’s
intention was to create a puzzle that looks just like three sticks... and he’s
succeeded (!).
These matching sticks in walnut, oak and magnolia have
markings branded on one face and they do literally look like three nicely
finished sticks ... in fact if it weren’t for the fact that some of them feel a
little lighter than you might expect, you’d be tempted to actually believe that
they were just a set of sticks.
Going to work on them you soon realise that one is a fairly
traditional puzzle box mechanism except for the fact that the seams are
wonderfully well disguised ... another is a pretty unusual mechanism – not that
tricky but a little surprising and again, you’d be hard-pressed to spot any
tell-tale signs of what’s going to happen – even when you’re looking in the
right spot! ... and the third one achieves exactly what the craftsman has set
out to do – perfectly!
...the third chapter in my latest Karakuri binge is all
Wil’s fault! I picked up a Kamei Money Box and a couple of String Boxes by
Fumio Tsuburai as I didn’t yet have any of them in my collection and Wil had
some spares available for sale.
The Money Box is another little gem of a box ... it looks
like a rosewood money box with a slot in the top and some experimentation will
lead you to believe that the bottom might just be a sliding panel... but
nothing you do at this point will get that box open! You will need to make use
of it, properly, and completely – and at that point the base will magically
slide open – I love the fact that the only way into the box is to use it ... and it will open when it’s
good and ready – but not until then.
The Christmas 2011 String Box has a single piece of string
with a pair of wooden beads on its ends running through the base of the box –
some sort of a locking mechanism steadfastly stops the top from being released
until you work out the combination of tugs and moves required to release the
latch ...locking it up again is a simple matter of replacing the lid. Neat!
The Christmas 2012 String Box has a pair of brightly
coloured cords coming out of the four sides of the base – tugging them in
various combinations and orders sometimes gives a different feel ... and
learning how to string (sorry!) a series of useful moves together in a
combination is the secret to opening this box ... and it’s a lot trickier than
the previous year’s String Box ... in fact I happen to know that it kept some real puzzlers at bay for several
weeks... so it can’t be that easy! Oh, and locking it back up again requires
most of the same moves, in reverse...
OK ... that’s probably enough to confess to at this point,
so I won’t mention the latest round of offers from the Karakuri Club ... :-)