A little while ago I managed to
pick up a couple of lovely little bits of puzzling treasure..
First on the list was a
particularly gorgeous creation from the mind of Oskar and the workshop of Tom Lensch. I’ve been trying to get hold of a copy of Wanderer for a while now and on the odd occasion when I spotted one
in the wild, I didn’t have enough cash left in my wallet… this time I saw it
coming and made sure I was suitably liquid and managed to snag myself a copy.
The concept is simple, a shuttle
is captured inside a cubic cage with a number of strategically placed notches
in the walls allowing the shuttle limited movement due to a couple of pairs of
protruding bumps on its sides. The shape of the shuttle itself allows some
interesting movements between both opposite and adjoining sides of the cube,
but only in some directions … and then only when the notches / bumps allow.
If that all sounds rather
familiar, it probably is since the Hanayama Cast Cuby is a scaled down shinier
version that simplifies the construction a little… although I suspect that the
simplification hasn’t done anything to reduce the solution-depth.
I just love the look of the
thing – way the shades of the different woods on the shuttle play out across
its rounded underbelly is just brilliant. The beautifully precise work on the
corners of the frame is tremendous. Definitely a little treasure to add to the
collection.
Next up was a variation on another
puzzle on the collection already. Three-Piece Blockhead was Bill Cutler's gorgeous IPP15 exchange puzzle. As the name suggests, it’s a variant of the
famous Blockhead puzzle that only uses three pieces.
Instead of four blocks in a
square frame (honest guv’) this one asks you to simply place three cherry
blocks into a hexagonal walnut frame. Everything looks neat and tidy when the
three blocks are in the frame to start with, but tip them out and it’s rather
obvious that there was a little subterfuge just below the surface of that
little puzzle as the blocks aren’t really shaped the way you might expect, so
finding the right way to put them back into the frame is a non-trivial task.
A great puzzle to give to
muggles who scoff at the idea that putting three blocks into a simple looking
frame might be in the slightest bit challenging… a lovely little piece of
puzzling history to go next to my standard four-piece Blockhead. :-)
Lastly a lovely little Eric
Fuller creation that has been on my lust-list for ages… it was one of those
things that jumped out at me from Eric’s gallery pages as being simply stunning
– Alfons Eyckmans’ Lolly Box. Four colourful
wooden Lollies are packed in a walnut box so that only their sticks protrude.
Removing the first takes a
reasonable 4 moves, as does the second, but this puzzle shows its true colours
when the next piece requires a further 17 moves to release it! I’d originally
lusted after it mainly because of its looks – I know – I’m really shallow! But
now that I’ve had a chance to play with it, there’s a lot more to enjoy about this
puzzle than just its looks…
It’s been beautifully made by Eric
so the pieces need to be aligned rather neatly to enable the necessary moves… and
those internal protrusions are in just the right / wrong place – depending on
your point of view.
A stunning little puzzle that I’m
glad has now moved off the lust-list and into the little collection.