Somehow I managed to miss Mike Toulouzas’ Illusion when it
was first offered. My mate Chris had picked up a copy and brought it around to
one of our show-and-tells - it was clearly a gorgeous puzzle … and he couldn’t
say enough good things about it puzzle-wise … so when Mike got in touch at the
tail end of last year and offered me a copy, I didn’t give him any time to
change his mind or offer it to anyone else.
It duly arrived in Barnt Green during a period of enforced
puzzle-hostage-taking as Gill’s got wise to my puzzle-buying around Christmas
and now routinely hijacks any parcels addressed to me during December and puts
them under the Christmas tree … so shortly after Christmas I got to unwrap this
beauty from Greece.
Saying that Mike has a knack for creating beautiful objects
that just happen to be incredible puzzles is a bit like saying English weather
is generally lousy! Case in point: today we had about 45 minutes of bright
sunshine (we hid indoors, not knowing what it was!), some snow, a serious helping of hail and a shed-load of rain – while the
temperature hovered around 4 degrees Celsius. I digress…
Illusion looks a bit like a complicated 12-piece burr with
some extra detailing around the centre that makes it look like the burr is
projecting out of a cube in the middle. Look a little closer and you’ll spot a
few diagonal cuts on the burr pieces and that’s enough to help you realise that
this little puzzle is not at all what it first appears to be … and knowing that
Mike is a master at odd angles, you’ll realise that this puzzle quickly earns,
and definitely requires, huge amounts of respect.
A bit of a casual fiddle around with this puzzle and you
find it’s not going to come apart the way you might have expected … find the
right axis and it’ll slide apart neatly, and then, unless you’re handling it
rather carefully, it will dismantle itself into six rather oddly shaped pieces …
each of which is unique!
It’s pretty easy to get the general idea of how the puzzle
is going to go back together again – each of the six pieces has four of the sticks
and some elements of the central cube structure, and combing them builds up the
cube in the middle … sort of … because there are a bunch of protuberances on
each piece which need to have corresponding gaps in their adjacent pieces …
which on their own would make for a pretty reasonable challenge … HOWEVER you’ll
then find there are multiple assemblies – virtually all of which cannot be
solved!
I’ve spent ages with five pieces locked together perfectly,
with spaces in exactly the right place for the final piece to be slotted in,
but no way of actually getting that last piece into the assembly because the
sliding axis that I need to have has somehow been blocked somewhere by a
well-fitting, albeit misplaced, piece.
Then onto another five-piece assembly
that stubbornly refuses to admit the final piece even though it’s the perfect
shape … until eventually a five-piece assembly arrives with a sliding axis to
remove two pieces, add the final piece and slide the two halves together …
puzzle-bliss.
Mike’s taken a well-known puzzle, added several unique Toulouzas
touches to it and turned it into an absolute beast! A drop-dead gorgeous beast,
but a beast nonetheless! The craftsmanship in there is staggering – each of the
six pieces is made up of around 10 individual oddly-shaped bits – glued
together supremely accurately with the result that the illusion of twelve
sticks piercing a cube is almost perfect.
Bravo Mike! That is an awesome achievement and a terrific
puzzle! Thanks.
i think you are a marvelous writer and your compliments are more than enough.
ReplyDeleteYou have a way with words that you transform something simple into a Novel!!!
thanks again and i am more than happy when someone(even one)enjoys my puzzle enough with out much of frustration.
Thanks Mike - Tell you what, I'll make you a deal - you keep making them THAT darn good, and I'll keep saying nice things about them! Deal? :-)
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